4.7 Article

Contrasting physiological traits of shade tolerance in Pinus and Podocarpaceae native to a tropical Vietnamese forest: insight from an aberrant flat-leaved pine

Journal

TREE PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 223-239

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpaa123

Keywords

carbon assimilation; Pinus; Podocarpaceae; shade tolerance; tropics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1644869]
  2. National Science Foundation [AGS-1602629]
  3. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Climate Center
  4. Lamont Center for Climate and Life
  5. Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University Ashton Award

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The absence of pines from tropical forests is an unusual phenomenon, potentially due to shade intolerance. However, a unique pine species, Pinus krempfii, from Vietnam's Central Highlands, thrives alongside shade-tolerant tropical species. Physiological traits of shade tolerance play a crucial role in the success of conifers in tropical forests, with different species demonstrating varying levels of tolerance strategies.
The absence of pines from tropical forests is a puzzling biogeographical oddity potentially explained by traits of shade intolerance. Pinus krempfii (Lecomte), a flat-leaved pine endemic to the Central Highlands of Vietnam, provides a notable exception as it seems to compete successfully with shade-tolerant tropical species. Here, we test the hypothesis that successful conifer performance at the juvenile stage depends on physiological traits of shade tolerance by comparing the physiological characteristics of P. krempfii to coexisting species from two taxa: the genus Pinus, and a relatively abundant and shade-tolerant conifer family found in pantropical forests, the Podocarpaceae. We examined leaf photosynthetic, respiratory and biochemical traits. Additionally, we compiled attainable maximum photosynthesis, maximum RuBP carboxylation (V-cmax) and maximum electron transport (J(max)) values for Pinus and Podocarpaceae species from the literature. In our literature compilation, P. krempfii was intermediate between Pinus and Podocarpaceae in its maximum photosynthesis and its V-cmax. Pinus exhibited a higher V-cmax than Podocarpaceae, resulting in a less steep slope in the linear relationship between J(max) and V-cmax. These results suggest that Pinus may be more shade intolerant than Podocarpaceae, with P. krempfii falling between the two taxa. However, in contrast, Vietnamese conifers' leaf mass per areas and biochemical traits did not highlight the same intermediate nature of P. krempfii. Furthermore, regardless of leaf morphology or family assignation, all species demonstrated a common and extremely high carbon gain efficiency. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of shade-tolerant photosynthetic traits for conifer survival in tropical forests. However, they also demonstrate a diversity of shade tolerance strategies, all of which lead to the persistence of Vietnamese juvenile conifers in low-light tropical understories.

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