4.7 Article

Plastic Responses in Growth, Morphology, and Biomass Allocation of Five Subtropical Tree Species to Different Degrees of Shading

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13070996

Keywords

plasticity; light adaptation; shade tolerance; morphology; shade avoidance syndrome

Categories

Funding

  1. Scientific Research Foundation of the Graduate School of Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University [324-1122yb071]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31570448]

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The study found that increasing shading led to lower growth and biomass allocation in most seedlings, with coniferous species showing more plasticity in growth traits and broadleaved species being more sensitive to shading in terms of growth and biomass allocation.
We investigated how different degrees of shading affected growth, morphology, and biomass allocation in seedlings from two coniferous and three broadleaved species. The experiment was conducted in a shade house over a 1-year period. Our results showed that under increasing shade, seedlings from most species exhibited lower total biomass, net assimilation rates, relative growth rates, root mass ratios, and root/shoot ratios. In contrast, the slenderness quotients, leaf area ratios, and specific leaf areas increased with increasing shade. For coniferous species, growth traits were relatively more plastic (responsive to shade) than morphology or biomass allocation traits, whereas for broadleaved species, growth and biomass allocation were the most shade-sensitive traits. When comparing coniferous versus broadleaved species, the former had a higher growth plasticity index and lower allocation plasticity than the latter. Root biomass and stem mass ratio were the most and least plastic traits in response to shading. Our results indicate that shade differentially affects coniferous and broadleaved species in terms of their growth, morphology, and biomass allocation. These findings have important implications for the establishment and maintenance of mixed-species stands.

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