4.8 Article

Linking canopy leaf area and light environments with tree size distributions to explain Amazon forest demography

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 7, Pages 636-645

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12440

Keywords

Amazon forest; canopy plasticity; canopy structure; forest dynamics; leaf area profiles; LiDAR; light competition; metabolic scaling theory; remote sensing; tree demography

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DDIG 0807221, DEB 0721140, OISE-PIRE 0730305, DEB-MSB 1340604]
  2. National Air and Space Administration [NNX09AI33G]
  3. NSF GRFP
  4. NSF PIRE
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [1340624, 1340604] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Forest biophysical structure - the arrangement and frequency of leaves and stems - emerges from growth, mortality and space filling dynamics, and may also influence those dynamics by structuring light environments. To investigate this interaction, we developed models that could use LiDAR remote sensing to link leaf area profiles with tree size distributions, comparing models which did not (metabolic scaling theory) and did allow light to influence this link. We found that a light environment-to-structure link was necessary to accurately simulate tree size distributions and canopy structure in two contrasting Amazon forests. Partitioning leaf area profiles into size-class components, we found that demographic rates were related to variation in light absorption, with mortality increasing relative to growth in higher light, consistent with a light environment feedback to size distributions. Combining LiDAR with models linking forest structure and demography offers a high-throughput approach to advance theory and investigate climate-relevant tropical forest change.

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