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How liana loads alter tree allometry in tropical forests
Authors:Arildo S Dias  Karin dos Santos  Flavio Antonio Maës dos Santos  Fernando R Martins
Institution:1.Plant Biology Graduate Program, Institute of Biology,University of Campinas – UNICAMP,Campinas,Brazil;2.Department of Botany,Swedish Museum of Natural History,Stockholm,Sweden;3.Department of Plant Biology, Institute of Biology,University of Campinas – UNICAMP,Campinas,Brazil;4.Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands
Abstract:Intense competition with lianas (wood climbers) can limit tree growth, reproduction, and survival. However, the negative effects of liana loads on tree allometry have not yet been addressed. We investigated the hypothesis that liana loading on tree crown alters tree’s allometry, expressed through slenderness (height–diameter ratio). The relationship between trunk slenderness and percentage of tree crown covered by lianas was investigated for 12 tree species from 10 fragments of the Semideciduous Seasonal Forest in Southeastern Brazil. We also tested whether the relationship between slenderness and wood density differ between trees without lianas and trees heavily infested. Liana loads significantly altered tree allometry by decreasing slenderness, even when lianas covered less than 25% of tree crown. Heavy-wood species decreased their trunk slenderness in a greater ratio than light-wood species. Our findings indicate that liana infestation shifts tree allometry, and these effects are stronger on heavy-wood tree species.
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