keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38047584/variable-thermal-plasticity-of-leaf-functional-traits-in-andean-tropical-montane-forests
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew J F Cox, Sebastián González-Caro, Patrick Meir, Iain P Hartley, Zorayda Restrepo, Juan C Villegas, Adriana Sanchez, Lina M Mercado
Tropical montane forests (TMFs) are biodiversity hotspots and provide vital ecosystem services, but they are disproportionately vulnerable to climate warming. In the Andes, cold-affiliated species from high elevations are being displaced at the hot end of their thermal distributions by warm-affiliated species migrating upwards from lower elevations, leading to compositional shifts. Leaf functional traits are strong indicators of plant performance and at the community level have been shown to vary along elevation gradients, reflecting plant adaptations to different environmental niches...
December 4, 2023: Plant, Cell & Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38023915/wood-density-is-related-to-aboveground-biomass-and-productivity-along-a-successional-gradient-in-upper-andean-tropical-forests
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dennis Castillo-Figueroa, Andrés González-Melo, Juan M Posada
Wood density (WD) is a key functional trait related to ecological strategies and ecosystem carbon dynamics. Despite its importance, there is a considerable lack of information on WD in tropical Andean forests, particularly regarding its relationship with forest succession and ecosystem carbon cycling. Here, we quantified WD in 86 upper Andean tree and shrub species in central Colombia, with the aim of determining how WD changes with forest succession and how it is related to productivity. We hypothesized that WD will increase with succession because early successional forests will be colonized by acquisitive species, which typically have low WD, while the shaded understory of older forests should favor higher WD...
2023: Frontiers in Plant Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38023878/comparing-modeling-methods-of-genomic-prediction-for-growth-traits-of-a-tropical-timber-species-shorea-macrophylla
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haruto Akutsu, Mohammad Na'iem, Widiyatno, Sapto Indrioko, Sawitri, Susilo Purnomo, Kentaro Uchiyama, Yoshihiko Tsumura, Naoki Tani
INTRODUCTION: Shorea macrophylla is a commercially important tropical tree species grown for timber and oil. It is amenable to plantation forestry due to its fast initial growth. Genomic selection (GS) has been used in tree breeding studies to shorten long breeding cycles but has not previously been applied to S. macrophylla . METHODS: To build genomic prediction models for GS, leaves and growth trait data were collected from a half-sib progeny population of S. macrophylla in Sari Bumi Kusuma forest concession, central Kalimantan, Indonesia...
2023: Frontiers in Plant Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38009920/global-analysis-of-poales-diversification-parallel-evolution-in-space-and-time-into-open-and-closed-habitats
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tammy L Elliott, Daniel Spalink, Isabel Larridon, Alexandre Rizzo Zuntini, Marcial Escudero, Jan Hackel, Russell L Barrett, Santiago Martín-Bravo, José Ignacio Márquez-Corro, Carolina Granados Mendoza, Aluoneswi C Mashau, Katya J Romero-Soler, Daniel A Zhigila, Berit Gehrke, Caroline Oliveira Andrino, Darren M Crayn, Maria S Vorontsova, Félix Forest, William J Baker, Karen L Wilson, David A Simpson, A Muthama Muasya
Poales are one of the most species-rich, ecologically and economically important orders of plants and often characterise open habitats, enabled by unique suites of traits. We test six hypotheses regarding the evolution and assembly of Poales in open and closed habitats throughout the world, and examine whether diversification patterns demonstrate parallel evolution. We sampled 42% of Poales species and obtained taxonomic and biogeographic data from the World Checklist of Vascular Plants database, which was combined with open/closed habitat data scored by taxonomic experts...
November 27, 2023: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38005736/linking-anthropogenic-landscape-perturbation-to-herbivory-and-pathogen-leaf-damage-in-tropical-tree-communities
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
José Luis Pablo-Rodríguez, Ángel E Bravo-Monzón, Cristina Montiel-González, Julieta Benítez-Malvido, Sandra Álvarez-Betancourt, Oriana Ramírez-Sánchez, Ken Oyama, María Leticia Arena-Ortiz, Mariana Yólotl Alvarez-Añorve, Luis Daniel Avila-Cabadilla
Anthropogenic disturbance of tropical humid forests leads to habitat loss, biodiversity decline, landscape fragmentation, altered nutrient cycling and carbon sequestration, soil erosion, pest/pathogen outbreaks, among others. Nevertheless, the impact of these alterations in multitrophic interactions, including host-pathogen and vector-pathogen dynamics, is still not well understood in wild plants. This study aimed to provide insights into the main drivers for the incidence of herbivory and plant pathogen damage, specifically, into how vegetation traits at the local and landscape scale modulate such interactions...
November 13, 2023: Plants (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37968940/dispersal-from-africa-to-the-neotropics-was-followed-by-multiple-transitions-across-neotropical-biomes-facilitated-by-frugivores
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenifer de Carvalho Lopes, Luiz Henrique M Fonseca, David M Johnson, Federico Luebert, Nancy Murray, Francis J Nge, Carlos Rodrigues-Vaz, Vincent Soulé, Renske E Onstein, Lúcia G Lohmann, Thomas L P Couvreur
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Plant disjunctions have fascinated biogeographers and ecologists for a long time. We use tribe Bocageeae (Annonaceae), a predominantly Neotropical plant group distributed across several present-day Neotropical biomes and with an African-American disjunction, to investigate long-distance dispersal mediated by frugivorous animals at both intercontinental and intracontinental scales. METHODS: We reconstructed a species-level phylogeny of tribe Bocageeae with a dataset composed of 116 nuclear markers...
November 16, 2023: Annals of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37962735/drought-adapted-leaves-are-produced-even-when-more-water-is-available-in-dry-tropical-forest
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tamires Soares Yule, Rosani do Carmo de Oliveira Arruda, Mauro Guida Santos
Species in dry environments may adjust their anatomical and physiological behaviors by adopting safer or more efficient strategies. Thus, species distributed across a water availability gradient may possess different phenotypes depending on the specific environmental conditions to which they are subjected. Leaf and vascular tissues are plastic and may vary strongly in response to environmental changes affecting an individual's survival and species distribution. To identify whether and how legumes leaves vary across a water availability gradient in a seasonally dry tropical forest, we quantified leaf construction costs and performed an anatomical study on the leaves of seven legume species...
November 14, 2023: Journal of Plant Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37943793/tree-species-differ-in-plant-economic-spectrum-traits-in-the-tropical-dry-forest-of-mexico
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco V Alvarado, Teresa Terrazas
In tropical dry forests, studies on wood anatomical traits have concentrated mainly on variations in vessel diameter and frequency. Recent research suggests that parenchyma and fibers also play an important role in water conduction and in xylem hydraulic safety. However, these relationships are not fully understood, and wood trait variation among different functional profiles as well as their variation under different water availability scenarios have been little studied. In this work, we aim to (1) characterize a set of wood anatomical traits among six selected tree species that represent the economic spectrum of tropical dry forests, (2) assess the variation in these traits under three different rainfall regimes, and (3) determine the relationships between wood anatomical traits and possible functional trade-offs...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37941065/climate-and-litter-traits-affect-the-response-of-litter-decomposition-to-soil-fauna
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dangjun Wang, Wuyang Xie, Fang Yuan, Chaochao Deng, Ruimin Qin, Huakun Zhou
OBJECTIVES: Soil fauna plays a crucial role in contributing to litter breakdown, accelerating the decomposition rate and enhancing the biogeochemical cycle in terrestrial ecosystems. Comprehending the specific fauna role of functional species in litter decomposition is challenging due to their vast numbers and diversity. Climate and litter quality are widely acknowledged as dominant drives of litter decomposition across large spatial scales. However, the pattern of climate and litter quality modulates the effect of soil fauna on litter decomposition remains largely unexplored...
November 8, 2023: BMC Research Notes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37934765/effects-of-leaf-traits-of-tropical-trees-on-the-abundance-and-body-mass-of-herbivorous-arthropod-communities
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jana E Schön, Yvonne Tiede, Marcel Becker, David A Donoso, Jürgen Homeier, Oliver Limberger, Jörg Bendix, Nina Farwig, Roland Brandl
In tropical forests, herbivorous arthropods remove between 7% up to 48% of leaf area, which has forced plants to evolve defense strategies. These strategies influence the palatability of leaves. Palatability, which reflects a syndrome of leaf traits, in turn influences both the abundance and the mean body mass not only of particular arthropod taxa but also of the total communities. In this study, we tested two hypotheses: (H1) The abundance of two important chewer guilds ('leaf chewers' and 'rostrum chewers'), dominant components of arthropod communities, is positively related to the palatability of host trees...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37897046/epiphytic-cam-bromeliads-indicate-vulnerability-of-tropical-forest-communities-to-climate-change
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamie Males, Yasmin Baksh-Comeau, Dan Jaggernauth, Shane Ballah, Shahada Paltoo, Howard Griffiths
BACKGROUND AND SCOPE: Vascular epiphytes have a variety of mechanisms to trap and retain water, including Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM). Niche segregation was investigated for epiphytic bromeliads on the tropical caribbean island of Trinidad, where habitats range from lowland deciduous forests to high rainfall montane tropical forests, around 1000m in altitude. METHODS: Four tank-impounding bromeliad epiphytes in the genus Aechmea (Ae. aquilega, Ae. fendleri, Ae...
October 28, 2023: Annals of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37895009/a-novel-isoprene-synthase-from-the-monocot-tree-copernicia-prunifera-arecaceae-confers-enhanced-drought-tolerance-in-transgenic-arabidopsis
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiamei Yu, Iuliia Khomenko, Franco Biasioli, Mingai Li, Claudio Varotto
The capacity to emit isoprene, among other stresses, protects plants from drought, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this trait are only partly understood. The Arecaceae (palms) constitute a very interesting model system to test the involvement of isoprene in enhancing drought tolerance, as their high isoprene emissions may have contributed to make them hyperdominant in neotropical dry forests, characterized by recurrent and extended periods of drought stress. In this study we isolated and functionally characterized a novel isoprene synthase , the gene responsible for isoprene biosynthesis, from Copernicia prunifera , a palm from seasonally dry tropical forests...
October 18, 2023: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37875736/divergence-in-functional-traits-in-seven-species-of-neotropical-palms-of-different-forest-strata
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gerardo Avalos, Milena Cambronero, Carolina Alvarez-Vergnani
Functional traits are morphological and physiological characteristics that determine growth, reproduction, and survival strategies. The leaf economics spectrum proposes two opposing life history strategies: species with an "acquisitive" strategy grow fast and exploit high-resource environments, while species with a "conservative" strategy emphasize survival and slow growth under low resource conditions. We analyzed intra and interspecific variation in nine functional traits related to biomass allocation and tissue quality in seven Neotropical palm species from understory and canopy strata...
October 24, 2023: Oecologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37857126/paleoenvironmental-inferences-on-the-late-miocene-hominoid-bearing-site-of-can-llobateres-ne-iberian-peninsula-an-ecometric-approach-based-on-functional-dental-traits
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara G Arranz, Isaac Casanovas-Vilar, Indrė Žliobaitė, Juan Abella, Chiara Angelone, Beatriz Azanza, Raymond Bernor, Omar Cirilli, Daniel DeMiguel, Marc Furió, Luca Pandolfi, Josep M Robles, Israel M Sánchez, Lars W van den Hoek Ostende, David M Alba
Hispanopithecus laietanus from the Late Miocene (9.8 Ma) of Can Llobateres 1 (CLL1; Vallès-Penedès Basin, NE Iberian Peninsula) represents one of the latest occurrences of fossil apes in Western mainland Europe, where they are last recorded at ∼9.5 Ma. The paleoenvironment of CLL1 is thus relevant for understanding the extinction of European hominoids. To refine paleoenvironmental inferences for CLL1, we apply ecometric models based on functional crown type (FCT) variables-a scoring scheme devised to capture macroscopic functional traits of occlusal shape and wear surfaces of herbivorous large mammal molars...
October 17, 2023: Journal of Human Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37847674/upscaling-the-effect-of-traits-in-response-to-drought-the-relative-importance-of-safety-efficiency-and-acquisitive-conservation-functional-axes
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
María Natalia Umaña, Beatriz Salgado-Negret, Natalia Norden, Viviana Salinas, Fabián Garzón, Sandra P Medina, Gina M Rodríguez-M, René López-Camacho, Alejandro Castaño-Naranjo, Hermes Cuadros, Rebeca Franke-Ante, Andrés Avella, Álvaro Idárraga-Piedrahita, Rubén Jurado, Jhon Nieto, Camila Pizano, Alba M Torres, Hernando García, Roy González-M
We tested the idea that functional trade-offs that underlie species tolerance to drought-driven shifts in community composition via their effects on demographic processes and subsequently on shifts in species' abundance. Using data from 298 tree species from tropical dry forests during the extreme ENSO-2015, we scaled-up the effects of trait trade-offs from individuals to communities. Conservative wood and leaf traits favoured slow tree growth, increased tree survival and positively impacted species abundance and dominance at the community-level...
October 17, 2023: Ecology Letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37817599/breakdown-of-the-growth-mortality-trade-off-along-a-soil-phosphorus-gradient-in-a-diverse-tropical-forest
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryota Aoyagi, Richard Condit, Benjamin L Turner
An ecological paradigm predicts that plant species adapted to low resource availability grow slower and live longer than those adapted to high resource availability when growing together. We tested this by using hierarchical Bayesian analysis to quantify variations in growth and mortality of ca 40 000 individual trees from greater than 400 species in response to limiting resources in the tropical forests of Panama. In contrast to theoretical expectations of the growth-mortality paradigm, we find that tropical tree species restricted to low-phosphorus soils simultaneously achieve faster growth rates and lower mortality rates than species restricted to high-phosphorus soils...
October 11, 2023: Proceedings. Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37816051/hurricane-wind-regimes-for-forests-of-north-america
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffery B Cannon, Chris J Peterson, Christopher M Godfrey, Andrew W Whelan
Despite the ubiquity of tropical cyclones and their impacts on forests, little is known about how tropical cyclone regimes shape the ecology and evolution of tree species. We used a simple meteorological model (HURRECON) to estimate wind fields from hurricanes in the Western North Atlantic and Eastern North Pacific tropical cyclone basins from storms occurring between 1851 and 2022. We characterize how the intensity and frequency of hurricanes differ among geographically distinct hurricane regimes and define four hurricane regimes for North America (Continental, Inland, Coastal, and Fringe)...
October 17, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37807917/hydraulic-variability-of-tropical-forests-is-largely-independent-of-water-availability
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chris M Smith-Martin, Robert Muscarella, William M Hammond, Steven Jansen, Timothy J Brodribb, Brendan Choat, Daniel M Johnson, German Vargas-G, María Uriarte
Tropical rainforest woody plants have been thought to have uniformly low resistance to hydraulic failure and to function near the edge of their hydraulic safety margin (HSM), making these ecosystems vulnerable to drought; however, this may not be the case. Using data collected at 30 tropical forest sites for three key traits associated with drought tolerance, we show that site-level hydraulic diversity of leaf turgor loss point, resistance to embolism (P50 ), and HSMs is high across tropical forests and largely independent of water availability...
October 9, 2023: Ecology Letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37784251/tropical-forest-mammal-occupancy-and-functional-diversity-increase-with-microhabitat-surface-area
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Gorczynski, Francesco Rovero, Arafat Mtui, Steven Shinyambala, Joseph Martine, Chia Hsieh, Luke Frishkoff, Lydia Beaudrot
Many animal-environment interactions are mediated by the physical forms of the environment, especially in tropical forests, where habitats are structurally complex and highly diverse. Higher structural complexity, measured as habitat surface area, may provide increased resource availability for animals, leading to higher animal diversity. Greater habitat surface area supports increased animal diversity in other systems, such as coral reefs and forest canopies, but it is uncertain how this relationship translates to communities of highly mobile, terrestrial mammal species inhabiting forest floors...
October 2, 2023: Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37680960/leaf-functional-diversity-and-environmental-filtering-in-a-tropical-dry-forest-comparison-between-two-geological-substrates
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Valentina Sandoval-Granillo, Jorge A Meave
The role of geological substrate in shaping plant community functional diversity remains poorly understood. Considering the involvement of leaves in the energy, water, and nutrient economics of plants, we hypothesized that leaves experience geology-related filtering, which in turn shapes their functional attributes and community leaf functional diversity on different substrates. We studied tropical dry forest communities on limestone and siliciclastic phyllite-derived soils, comparing their functional diversity and soil physico-chemical properties...
September 2023: Ecology and Evolution
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