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Weak Competition Among Tropical Tree Seedlings: Implications for Species Coexistence
Authors:C E Timothy Paine  Kyle E Harms  Stefan A Schnitzer  Walter P Carson
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, U.S.A.;
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 2072, Balboa, Panama;
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53211, U.S.A.;
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260, U.S.A.
Abstract:The intensity of competition among forest tree seedlings is poorly understood, but has important ramifications for their recruitment and for the maintenance of species diversity. Intense competition among seedlings could allow competitively dominant species to exclude subordinate species. Alternatively, the low density and small stature of forest tree seedlings could preclude intense interseedling competition. In this case, other processes, such as size-asymmetric competition with adults, interactions with consumers, or neutral dynamics would prevail as those structuring the forest understory. We tested the intensity of, and potential for, intraspecific competition among tree seedlings of three species ( Brosimum alicastrum , Matisia cordata , and Pouteria reticulata ) in two Neotropical rain forests. We reduced stem densities by up to 90 percent and monitored individual growth and survival rates for up to 24 mo. Individual growth and survival rates were generally unrelated to stem density. Contrary to the predicted behavior of intensely competing plant populations, the distribution of individual heights did not become more left-skewed with time for any species, regardless of plot density; i.e. , excesses of short, suppressed individuals did not accumulate in high-density plots. We further measured the overlap of zones of influence (ZOIs) to assess the potential for resource competition. Seedling ZOIs overlapped only slightly in extremely dense monodominant plots, and even less in ambient-density plots of mixed composition. Our results thus suggest that interseedling competition was weak. Given the low density of tree seedlings in Neotropical forests, we infer that resource competition among seedlings may be irrelevant to their recruitment.
Keywords:Brosimum alicastrum            competitive irrelevance  maintenance of biodiversity              Matisia cordata            resource competition  Panama  Peru              Pouteria reticulata            zone of influence
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