Shoot dynamics and architecture of saplings in Fagus crenata across its geographical range |
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Authors: | Tsutom Hiura |
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Affiliation: | (1) Tomakomai Research Station, Hokkaido University Forests, Tomakomai 053, Japan Fax: 81-144-33-2173; e-mail: hiura@exfor.agr.hokudai.ac.jp, JP |
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Abstract: | Relationships between leaf or shoot size, number, and arrangement in response to light were investigated to test the hypothesis that these characteristics are linked. In order to test this hypothesis, the divergence in allometry and shoot dynamics in saplings of Japanese beech (Fagus crenata) obtained from four populations and having different leaf sizes were examined in a nursery under both full sun and shade conditions. Trees with different leaf sizes also showed large differences in canopy structure, particularly when shade-grown saplings were compared. The final leaf mass distributions of the large-leaf populations were conical or “bottom - heavy”, while those of the small-leaf populations were planar or “top - heavy”. The slope of the allometric relations between leaf mass and shoot and branch mass in small-leaved populations were steeper than those in large-leaf populations. The four populations were classified into two growth types: populations producing a few large leaf and shoot modules corresponded to “stem growth type”, and those producing many small leaf and shoot modules corresponded to “leaf growth type”. These kinds of intra-specific variation in architecture and growth of F. crenata trees may influence the structure and dynamics of forests in accordance with differences in competitive ability or sensitivity to disturbances such as windstorm. Received: 18 March 1997 / Accepted: 21 October 1997 |
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Keywords: | Module dynamics Leaf characteristics Allometry Fagus crenata Geographic variation |
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