Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest

Abstract The vertical gradient of light in closed‐canopy forests selects for trees with different adult statures, but our understanding of how stature affects forest diversity and demography is unclear. In a species‐rich rainforest in Cameroon, we quantified the contributions of four growth forms of...

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Main Authors: Moses B. Libalah, Sabrina E. Russo, George B. Chuyong, Duncan Thomas, David Kenfack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70144
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author Moses B. Libalah
Sabrina E. Russo
George B. Chuyong
Duncan Thomas
David Kenfack
author_facet Moses B. Libalah
Sabrina E. Russo
George B. Chuyong
Duncan Thomas
David Kenfack
author_sort Moses B. Libalah
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The vertical gradient of light in closed‐canopy forests selects for trees with different adult statures, but our understanding of how stature affects forest diversity and demography is unclear. In a species‐rich rainforest in Cameroon, we quantified the contributions of four growth forms of increasing adult stature (treelet, understory, canopy, emergent species) to forest structure and diversity, and investigated variation in life history trade‐offs across growth forms. Treelets had the highest stem density, contributed the most to forest diversity, and diverged from larger statured species in terms of demographic trade‐offs. Growth rates were slower for smaller statured than for larger statured species, and at the adult stage, treelets had significantly lower mortality than other growth forms. We observed significant interspecific trade‐off relationships between staure and demographic rates that often differed between growth forms. Recruitment rate strongly declined with adult stature for all growth forms, but recruitment per reproductive adult declined only for emergents. While we observed a significant growth‐mortality trade‐off across all species, the trade‐off was similar across growth forms. Smaller statured species in our study are not light‐demanding but rather treelet and understory species that live entirely in the shaded understory. Differences in how historical biogeography has shaped species pools may ultimately cause variation in how adult stature contributes to tropical forest diversity.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2150-8925
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Wiley
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series Ecosphere
spelling doaj-art-9f61be7734184e679aca9781f63742bc2025-01-30T01:44:38ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252025-01-01161n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.70144Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforestMoses B. Libalah0Sabrina E. Russo1George B. Chuyong2Duncan Thomas3David Kenfack4Department of Plant Biology, Faculty of Science University of Yaoundé I Yaoundé CameroonSchool of Biological Science University of Nebraska Lincoln Nebraska USADepartment of Plant Science University of Buea Buea CameroonDepartment of Botany and Plant Pathology Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USASmithsonian Forest Global Earth Observatory Washington DC USAAbstract The vertical gradient of light in closed‐canopy forests selects for trees with different adult statures, but our understanding of how stature affects forest diversity and demography is unclear. In a species‐rich rainforest in Cameroon, we quantified the contributions of four growth forms of increasing adult stature (treelet, understory, canopy, emergent species) to forest structure and diversity, and investigated variation in life history trade‐offs across growth forms. Treelets had the highest stem density, contributed the most to forest diversity, and diverged from larger statured species in terms of demographic trade‐offs. Growth rates were slower for smaller statured than for larger statured species, and at the adult stage, treelets had significantly lower mortality than other growth forms. We observed significant interspecific trade‐off relationships between staure and demographic rates that often differed between growth forms. Recruitment rate strongly declined with adult stature for all growth forms, but recruitment per reproductive adult declined only for emergents. While we observed a significant growth‐mortality trade‐off across all species, the trade‐off was similar across growth forms. Smaller statured species in our study are not light‐demanding but rather treelet and understory species that live entirely in the shaded understory. Differences in how historical biogeography has shaped species pools may ultimately cause variation in how adult stature contributes to tropical forest diversity.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70144demographygrowth ratemortality raterain forestrecruitment ratetrade‐off
spellingShingle Moses B. Libalah
Sabrina E. Russo
George B. Chuyong
Duncan Thomas
David Kenfack
Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
Ecosphere
demography
growth rate
mortality rate
rain forest
recruitment rate
trade‐off
title Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
title_full Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
title_fullStr Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
title_full_unstemmed Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
title_short Demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an African tropical rainforest
title_sort demographic rates and diversity vary with tree stature and ontogenetic stage in an african tropical rainforest
topic demography
growth rate
mortality rate
rain forest
recruitment rate
trade‐off
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70144
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AT sabrinaerusso demographicratesanddiversityvarywithtreestatureandontogeneticstageinanafricantropicalrainforest
AT georgebchuyong demographicratesanddiversityvarywithtreestatureandontogeneticstageinanafricantropicalrainforest
AT duncanthomas demographicratesanddiversityvarywithtreestatureandontogeneticstageinanafricantropicalrainforest
AT davidkenfack demographicratesanddiversityvarywithtreestatureandontogeneticstageinanafricantropicalrainforest