TREE COEXISTENCE ON A SLOPE - AN ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF TRUNK INCLINATION

Authors
Citation
R. Ishii et M. Higashi, TREE COEXISTENCE ON A SLOPE - AN ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF TRUNK INCLINATION, Proceedings - Royal Society. Biological Sciences, 264(1378), 1997, pp. 133-139
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
09628452
Volume
264
Issue
1378
Year of publication
1997
Pages
133 - 139
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8452(1997)264:1378<133:TCOAS->2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Under storey trees on slopes often incline their trunks downwards. The adaptive significance of this conspicuous phenomenon has, however, re mained elusive. Here we present a theoretical model for the growth of under storey trees on a slope, which shows that the maximum rate of tr ee survival, and the optimal degree of trunk inclination, increase as the slope gets steeper, clearly indicating an adaptive significance of trunk inclination on slopes. Close examination of the results reveals that the advantage of trunk inclination on a slope is in shortening t he distance from the canopy surface, and that this effect is enhanced the steeper the slope. Furthermore, the model predicts that the maximu m tree survival rate increases with the slope angle more sharply under poorer light conditions. The predictions of the model are supported b y an under storey species, Rhododendron tashiroi, which grows in everg reen forests on the Japanese island of Yakushima. R. tashiroi exhibits sharper trunk inclination and coexists more successfully on steeper s lopes with the dominant canopy species, Distylium racemosum; and susta ins itself even under poor light conditions where the slope is suffici ently steep. This also suggests that trunk inclination is a mechanism used by under storey species to coexist with the dominant canopy speci es.