4.7 Article

Ecological Strategy Spectra for Communities of Different Successional Stages in the Tropical Lowland Rainforest of Hainan Island

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13070973

Keywords

ecological strategy; succession; functional traits; forest vegetation; successional dynamics; ecosystem function

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31901210]
  2. Doctoral Research Foundation of Liaocheng University [318051822]

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Plant ecological strategies are shaped by long-term adaptation to the environment and play a crucial role in plant survival and reproduction. Research has shown that ecological strategies may shift in plant communities over the course of succession, leading to variations in the ecological strategy spectra of different successional stages.
Plant ecological strategies are shaped by long-term adaptation to the environment and are beneficial to plant survival and reproduction. Research is ongoing to better understand how plants best allocate resources for growth, survival and reproduction, as well as how ecological strategies may shift in plant communities over the course of succession. In this study, 12 forest dynamics plots in three different successional stages were selected for study in the tropical lowland rainforest ecosystem of Hainan Island. For each plot, using Grime's competitor, a stress-tolerator, the ruderal (CSR) scheme and using the CSR ratio tool StrateFy, an ecological strategy spectrum was constructed using functional trait data obtained by collecting leaf samples from all woody species. The ecological strategy spectra were compared across successional stages to reveal successional dynamics. The results showed: (1) The ecological strategy spectra varied among forest communities belonging to three different successional stages. (2) The community-weighted mean CSR (CWM-CSR) strategies shifted with succession: CWM-S values decreased, while the CWM-C and CWM-R values increased. Overall, shifts in plant functional traits occurred slowly and steadily with succession showing complex and diverse trade-offs and leading to variation among the ecological strategy spectra of different successional stages.

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