Evidence of species-specific neighborhood effects in the dipterocarpaceae of a Bornean rain forest
Authored by P Stoll, DM Newbery
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1890/04-1540
Sponsors:
Royal Society
Royal Netherlands Navy
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Although accumulating evidence indicates that local intraspecific
density-dependent effects are not as rare in species-rich communities as
previously suspected, there are still very few detailed and systematic
neighborhood analyses of species-rich communities. Here, we provide such
an analysis with the overall goal of quantifying the relative importance
of inter- and intraspecific interaction strength in a primary, lowland
dipterocarp forest located at Danum, Sabah, Malaysia. Using data on 10
abundant overstory dipterocarp species from two 4-ha permanent plots, we
evaluated the effects of neighbors on the absolute growth rate of focal
trees (from 1986 to 1996) over increasing neighborhood radii (from 1 to
20 m) with multiple regressions. Only trees 10 cm to < 100 cm girth at
breast height in 1986 were considered as focal trees. Among neighborhood
models with one neighbor term, models including only conspecific larger
trees performed best in five out of 10 species. Negative effects of
conspecific larger neighbors were most apparent in large overstory
species such as those of the genus Shorea. However, neighborhood models
with separate terms and radii for heterospecific and conspecific
neighbors accounted for more variability in absolute growth rates than
did neighborhood models with one neighbor term. The conspecific term was
significant for nine out of 10 species. Moreover, in five out of 10
species, trees without conspecific neighbors had significantly higher
absolute growth rates than trees with conspecific neighbors. Averaged
over the 10 species, trees without conspecific neighbors grew 32.4 cm(2)
in basal area from 1986 to 1996, whereas trees with conspecific
neighbors only grew 14.7 cm(2) in basal area, although there was no
difference in initial basal area between trees in the two groups.
Averaged across the six species of the genus Shorea, negative effects of
conspecific larger trees were significantly stronger than for
heterospecific larger neighbors. Thus, high local densities within
neighborhoods of 20 m may lead to strong intraspecific negative and, hence, density-dependent, effects even in species rich communities with
low overall densities at larger spatial scales. We conjecture that the
strength of conspecific effects may be correlated with the degree of
host specificity of ectomycorrhizae.
Tags
Density-dependence
Spatially
explicit model
Neotropical forest
Including competitive asymmetry
Kalimantan indonesian borneo
Driven tropical forest
Danum-valley
Habitat specialization
Distance-dependence
Local interference