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Roles of climate and functional traits in controlling toothed vs. untoothed leaf margins
Author(s) -
Royer Dana L.,
Peppe Daniel J.,
Wheeler Elisabeth A.,
Niinemets Ülo
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.3732/ajb.1100428
Subject(s) - biology , deciduous , canopy , leaf size , botany , trait , phenology , horticulture , computer science , programming language
• Premise of the study: Leaf‐margin state (toothed vs. untoothed) forms the basis of several popular methods for reconstructing temperature. Some potential confounding factors have not been investigated with large data sets, limiting our understanding of the adaptive significance of leaf teeth and their reliability to reconstruct paleoclimate. Here we test the strength of correlations between leaf‐margin state and deciduousness, leaf thickness, wood type (ring‐porous vs. diffuse‐porous), height within community, and several leaf economic variables. • Methods: We assembled a trait database for 3549 species from six continents based on published and original data. The strength of associations between traits was quantified using correlational and principal axes approaches. • Key results: Toothed species, independent of temperature, are more likely to be deciduous and to have thin leaves, a high leaf nitrogen concentration, a low leaf mass per area, and ring‐porous wood. Canopy trees display the highest sensitivity between leaf‐margin state and temperature; subcanopy plants, especially herbs, are less sensitive. • Conclusions: Our data support hypotheses linking the adaptive significance of teeth to leaf thickness and deciduousness (in addition to temperature). Toothed species associate with the “fast‐return” end of the leaf economic spectrum, providing another functional link to thin leaves and the deciduous habit. Accounting for these confounding factors should improve climate estimates from tooth‐based methods.