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Effects of Drought, Pest Pressure and Light Availability on Seedling Establishment and Growth: Their Role for Distribution of Tree Species across a Tropical Rainfall Gradient

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dc.contributor.author Gaviria, Julian en
dc.contributor.author Engelbrecht, Bettina M. J. en
dc.date.accessioned 2016-01-05T15:50:01Z
dc.date.available 2016-01-05T15:50:01Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.citation Gaviria, Julian and Engelbrecht, Bettina M. J. 2015. "<a href="https%3A%2F%2Frepository.si.edu%2Fhandle%2F10088%2F27834">Effects of Drought, Pest Pressure and Light Availability on Seedling Establishment and Growth: Their Role for Distribution of Tree Species across a Tropical Rainfall Gradient</a>." <em>PloS One</em>. 10 (11):<a href="https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143955">https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143955</a> en
dc.identifier.issn 1932-6203
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10088/27834
dc.description.abstract Tree species distributions associated with rainfall are among the most prominent patterns in tropical forests. Understanding the mechanisms shaping these patterns is important to project impacts of global climate change on tree distributions and diversity in the tropics. Beside direct effects of water availability, additional factors co-varying with rainfall have been hypothesized to play an important role, including pest pressure and light availability. While low water availability is expected to exclude drought-intolerant wet forest species from drier forests (physiological tolerance hypothesis), high pest pressure or low light availability are hypothesized to exclude dry forest species from wetter forests (pest pressure gradient and light availability hypothesis, respectively). To test these hypotheses at the seed-to-seedling transition, the potentially most critical stage for species discrimination, we conducted a reciprocal transplant experiment combined with a pest exclosure treatment at a wet and a dry forest site in Panama with seeds of 26 species with contrasting origin. Establishment success after one year did not reflect species distribution patterns. However, in the wet forest, wet origin species had a home advantage over dry forest species through higher growth rates. At the same time, drought limited survival of wet origin species in the dry forest, supporting the physiological tolerance hypothesis. Together these processes sort species over longer time frames, and exclude species outside their respective home range. Although we found pronounced effects of pests and some effects of light availability on the seedlings, they did not corroborate the pest pressure nor light availability hypotheses at the seed-to-seedling transition. Our results underline that changes in water availability due to climate change will have direct consequences on tree regeneration and distributions along tropical rainfall gradients, while indirect effects of light and pests are less important. en
dc.relation.ispartof PloS One en
dc.title Effects of Drought, Pest Pressure and Light Availability on Seedling Establishment and Growth: Their Role for Distribution of Tree Species across a Tropical Rainfall Gradient en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.identifier.srbnumber 138337
dc.identifier.doi 10.1371/journal.pone.0143955
rft.jtitle PloS One
rft.volume 10
rft.issue 11
dc.description.SIUnit STRI en
dc.description.SIUnit Peer-reviewed en


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