TREE SPECIES STRATIFICATION IN RELATION TO ALLOMETRY AND DEMOGRAPHY IN A WARM-TEMPERATE RAIN-FOREST

Authors
Citation
Si. Aiba et T. Kohyama, TREE SPECIES STRATIFICATION IN RELATION TO ALLOMETRY AND DEMOGRAPHY IN A WARM-TEMPERATE RAIN-FOREST, Journal of Ecology, 84(2), 1996, pp. 207-218
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00220477
Volume
84
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
207 - 218
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0477(1996)84:2<207:TSSIRT>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
1 We studied stratification of tree species by analysing the allometry and demography of 14 abundant species in a warm-temperate rain forest on Yakushima Island, southern Japan. 2 We regressed relationships bet ween trunk diameter at breast height (d.b.h.) and top height of trees using an expanded allometry which incorporates an upper limit to heigh t. As trees grew up towards the canopy, individuals with the same d.b. h. were taller if they came from species with larger maximum height. T his appeared to reflect a trade-off between height growth and lateral growth of crowns. Two canopy dominants continued to gain in d.b.h. aft er they had reached the canopy, while their height remained almost con stant. 3 We examined size-specific patterns of relative growth rate of d.b.h. from a decade of field censuses. By fitting a Gompertz-type gr owth curve to size-specific growth of individual trees, we derived a p rojected potential maximum size for each species. The projected maximu m size (both d.b.h. and height) was similar to the observed value for most species. Three canopy species exhibited larger projected maximum d.b.h. than observed values; the difference seemed to be due to mortal ity during the long period that each of these species resides in the c anopy. 4 Understorey species recruited equally well as larger-growing species amongst the 14 studied species, although their tree mass incre ments per unit time were smaller. This suggests that understorey speci es have more effective recruiting capacity relative to vegetative grow th.