Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Le Bec J., Courbaud B., Le Moguedec G., Pélissier Raphaël. (2015). Characterizing tropical tree species growth strategies : learning from inter-individual variability and scale invariance. Plos One, 10 (3), p. e0117028 [18 p.]. ISSN 1932-6203.

Titre du document
Characterizing tropical tree species growth strategies : learning from inter-individual variability and scale invariance
Année de publication
2015
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000351275700014
Auteurs
Le Bec J., Courbaud B., Le Moguedec G., Pélissier Raphaël
Source
Plos One, 2015, 10 (3), p. e0117028 [18 p.] ISSN 1932-6203
Understanding how tropical tree species differ in their growth strategies is critical to predict forest dynamics and assess species coexistence. Although tree growth is highly variable in tropical forests, species maximum growth is often considered as a major axis synthesizing species strategies, with fast-growing pioneer and slow-growing shade tolerant species as emblematic representatives. We used a hierarchical linear mixed model and 21-years long tree diameter increment series in a monsoon forest of the Western Ghats, India, to characterize species growth strategies and question whether maximum growth summarizes these strategies. We quantified both species responses to biotic and abiotic factors and individual tree effects unexplained by these factors. Growth responses to competition and tree size appeared highly variable among species which led to reversals in performance ranking along those two gradients. However, species-specific responses largely overlapped due to large unexplained variability resulting mostly from inter-individual growth differences consistent over time. On average one-third of the variability captured by our model was explained by covariates. This emphasizes the high dimensionality of the tree growth process, i.e. the fact that trees differ in many dimensions (genetics, life history) influencing their growth response to environmental gradients, some being unmeasured or unmeasurable. In addition, intraspecific variability increased as a power function of species maximum growth partly as a result of higher absolute responses of fast-growing species to competition and tree size. However, covariates explained on average the same proportion of intraspecific variability for slow-and fast-growing species, which showed the same range of relative responses to competition and tree size. These results reflect a scale invariance of the growth process, underlining that slow-and fast-growing species exhibit the same range of growth strategies.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du monde végétal [076] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Description Géographique
INDE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010064066]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010064066
Contact