Interspecific vs intraspecific patterns in leaf nitrogen of forest trees across nitrogen availability gradients

被引:18
作者
Dybzinski, Ray [1 ]
Farrior, Caroline E. [1 ]
Ollinger, Scott [2 ]
Pacala, Stephen W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
[2] Univ New Hampshire, Inst Study Earth Oceans & Space, Durham, NH 03824 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Evolutionarily Stable Strategy (ESS); foliar nitrogen (N); forest diversity; game theory; light competition; Perfect Plasticity Approximation (PPA); shade tolerance; White Mountains New Hampshire; CARBON GAIN; CANOPY STRUCTURE; SHADE TOLERANCE; GAME-THEORY; LIGHT; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; AREA; COMPETITION; MASS; SEEDLINGS;
D O I
10.1111/nph.12353
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Leaf nitrogen content (delta) coordinates with total canopy N and leaf area index (LAI) to maximize whole-crown carbon (C) gain, but the constraints and contributions of within-species plasticity to this phenomenon are poorly understood. Here, we introduce a game theoretic, physiologically based community model of height-structured competition between late-successional tree species. Species are constrained by an increasing, but saturating, relationship between photosynthesis and leaf N per unit leaf area. Higher saturating rates carry higher fixed costs. For a given whole-crown N content, a C gain-maximizing compromise exists between d and LAI. With greater whole-crown N, both d and LAI increase within species. However, a shift in community composition caused by reduced understory light at high soil N availability (which competitively favors species with low leaf costs and consequent low optimal d) counteracts the within-species response, such that community-level d changes little with soil N availability. These model predictions provide a new explanation for the changes in leaf N per mass observed in data from three dominant broadleaf species in temperate deciduous forests of New England. Attempts to understand large-scale patterns in vegetation often omit competitive interactions and intraspecific plasticity, but here both are essential to an understanding of ecosystem-level patterns.
引用
收藏
页码:112 / 121
页数:10
相关论文
共 64 条
[51]   Are species adapted to their regeneration niche, adult niche, or both? [J].
Poorter, Lourens .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2007, 169 (04) :433-442
[52]   Predictive models of forest dynamics [J].
Purves, Drew ;
Pacala, Stephen .
SCIENCE, 2008, 320 (5882) :1452-1453
[53]   Predicting and understanding forest dynamics using a simple tractable model [J].
Purves, Drew W. ;
Lichstein, Jeremy W. ;
Strigul, Nikolay ;
Pacala, Stephen W. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2008, 105 (44) :17018-17022
[54]   LEAF AGE AND SEASON INFLUENCE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN LEAF NITROGEN, LEAF MASS PER AREA AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN MAPLE AND OAK TREES [J].
REICH, PB ;
WALTERS, MB ;
ELLSWORTH, DS .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1991, 14 (03) :251-259
[55]   Carbon gain in a multispecies canopy: the role of specific leaf area and photosynthetic nitrogen-use efficiency in the tragedy of the commons [J].
Schieving, F ;
Poorter, H .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 1999, 143 (01) :201-211
[56]   Nitrogen mineralization: Challenges of a changing paradigm [J].
Schimel, JP ;
Bennett, J .
ECOLOGY, 2004, 85 (03) :591-602
[57]   NUTRIENT BUDGETS OF MARSH PLANTS - EFFICIENCY CONCEPTS AND RELATION TO AVAILABILITY [J].
SHAVER, GR ;
MELILLO, JM .
ECOLOGY, 1984, 65 (05) :1491-1510
[58]   Modelling functional trait acclimation for trees of different height in a forest light gradient: emergent patterns driven by carbon gain maximization [J].
Sterck, Frank ;
Schieving, Feike .
TREE PHYSIOLOGY, 2011, 31 (09) :1024-1037
[59]   SCALING FROM TREES TO FORESTS: TRACTABLE MACROSCOPIC EQUATIONS FOR FOREST DYNAMICS [J].
Strigul, Nikolay ;
Pristinski, Denis ;
Purves, Drew ;
Dushoff, Jonathan ;
Pacala, Stephen .
ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2008, 78 (04) :523-545
[60]  
TILMAN D, 1988