4.5 Article

Trade-offs between succulent and non-succulent epiphytes underlie variation in drought tolerance and avoidance

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 198, Issue 3, Pages 645-661

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-022-05140-9

Keywords

Functional traits; Water relations; Microclimatic gradient; Stable isotopes; Tropical montane cloud forest

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS-1556289]
  2. Franklin and Marshall College (SGG), NSF [IOS-1556319]
  3. University of Utah (NN), NSF [IOS-1557333]
  4. University of California-Berkeley (TED)

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This study investigated epiphyte communities in a tropical montane cloud forest region in Costa Rica and found differences in functional traits among different sites. However, there was still overlap in functional trait space across multiple sites. Significant correlations were found among functional traits in the epiphyte community, with leaf succulence emerging as an important trait.
Epiphyte communities comprise important components of many forest ecosystems in terms of biomass and diversity, but little is known regarding trade-offs that underlie diversity and structure in these communities or the impact that microclimate has on epiphyte trait allocation. We measured 22 functional traits in vascular epiphyte communities across six sites that span a microclimatic gradient in a tropical montane cloud forest region in Costa Rica. We quantified traits that relate to carbon and nitrogen allocation, gas exchange, water storage, and drought tolerance. Functional diversity was high in all but the lowest elevation site where drought likely limits the success of certain species with particular trait combinations. For most traits, variation was explained by relationships with other traits, rather than differences in microclimate across sites. Although there were significant differences in microclimate, epiphyte abundance, and diversity, we found substantial overlap in multivariate trait space across five of the sites. We found significant correlations between functional traits, many of which related to water storage (leaf water content, leaf thickness, hydrenchymal thickness), drought tolerance (turgor loss point), and carbon allocation (specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content). This suite of trait correlations suggests that the epiphyte community has evolved functional strategies along with a drought avoidance versus drought tolerance continuum where leaf succulence emerged as a pivotal overall trait.

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