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Plant–soil associations in a lower montane tropical forest: physiological acclimation and herbivore‐mediated responses to nitrogen addition
Author(s) -
Andersen Kelly M.,
Corre Marife D.,
Turner Benjamin L.,
Dalling James W.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
functional ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.272
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 1365-2435
pISSN - 0269-8463
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2010.01731.x
Subject(s) - biology , understory , biomass (ecology) , herbivore , seedling , ecology , agronomy , botany , canopy
Summary 1.  Soil nutrients influence plant productivity and community composition in tropical forests. In lower montane tropical forests in western Panama, the distribution of understory palm species over a scale of 1–20 km correlates with differences in soil nitrogen (N). We hypothesized that soil N determines seedling performance in the forest understory, and, may therefore influence species distributions along the soil N gradient. 2.  We explored the potential for N availability to generate species‐habitat associations through species‐specific differences in biomass allocation, photosynthetic capacity, N use‐efficiency, and susceptibility to herbivory. Seedlings of nine palm species from two sub‐families and four habitat types were transplanted into N‐addition and control plots at a low N site. Growth, mortality, biomass allocation, photosynthesis, foliar N content and herbivory were measured over 21 months. 3.  Foliar N increased for all species (15–68%) following N addition. Most species showed strong (20–200%) increases in photosynthetic rates with N addition except two species with marginal decreases in photosynthetic rates (5–15%). However, shifts in physiological traits did not increase relative growth rate or change in biomass allocation for any species or N treatment combination. Rather, increased leaf quality contributed to greater levels of herbivory in species associated with soils of intermediate and high inorganic N availability. 4.  Thus, potential increases in overall growth with N addition were masked by herbivory, resulting in no apparent growth response with increased N. We suggest that for understory palms, and potentially other montane forest plants, distribution patterns are driven by a combination of physiological and herbivore‐mediated responses to soil nutrient availability.

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