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Elevation,Topography, and Edge Effects Drive Functional Composition of Woody Plant Species in Tropical Montane Forests
Authors:Amira Apaza‐Quevedo  Denis Lippok  Isabell Hensen  Matthias Schleuning  Sabine Both
Institution:1. Institute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden, Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg, Halle, Germany;2. Herbario Nacional de Bolivia, Universidad Mayor de San Andrés, La Paz, Bolivia;3. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;4. Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK‐F) and Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, Frankfurt (Main), Germany;5. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, U.K
Abstract:Tropical montane forests comprise heterogeneous environments along natural gradients of topography and elevation. Human‐induced edge effects further increase the environmental heterogeneity in these forests. The simultaneous effects of natural and human‐induced gradients on the functional diversity of plant leaf traits are poorly understood. In a tropical montane forest in Bolivia, we studied environmental gradients associated with elevation (from 1900 m to 2500 m asl), topography (ridge and gorge), and edge effects (forest edge vs. forest interior), and their relationship with leaf traits and resource‐use strategies. First, we investigated associations of environmental conditions (soil properties and microclimate) with six leaf traits, measured on 119 woody plant species. Second, we evaluated changes in functional composition with community‐weighted means and functional structure with multidimensional functional diversity indices (FRic, FEve and FDiv). We found significant associations between leaf traits and soil properties in accordance with the trade‐off between acquisition and conservation of resources. Functional composition of leaf traits shifted from the dominance of acquisitive species in habitats at low altitudes, gorges, and forest interior to the dominance of conservative species in habitats at high altitudes, ridges, and forest edges. Functional structure was only weakly associated with the environmental gradients. Natural and human‐induced environmental gradients, especially soil properties, are important for driving leaf traits and resource‐use strategies of woody plants. Nevertheless, weak associations between functional structure and environmental gradients suggest a high redundancy of functional leaf traits in this tropical montane forest.
Keywords:acquisitive‐conservative trade‐off  Bolivia  fourth‐corner analysis  fragmentation  functional diversity  functional structure  leaf traits
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