4.7 Article

Conspecific negative density-dependent mortality and the structure of temperate forests

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 9, Pages 2493-2503

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/13-2098.1

Keywords

density dependence; Janzen-Connell hypothesis; pair-correlation function; seedling dynamics; spatial distribution; tree diversity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Award [1110533]
  2. FORESTGEO initiative
  3. Smithsonian Institution-National Zoological Park
  4. HSBC Climate Partnership
  5. The 1923 Fund
  6. Cofrin Center for Biodiversity
  7. Smithsonian Institution's Center for Tropical Forest Science
  8. Indiana Academy of Sciences
  9. Division Of Environmental Biology
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences [1110533] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Factors that control tree seedling dynamics are critical determinants of forest diversity. We examined the role of density-dependent mortality and abiotic factors in the differential establishment and survival of tree seedlings at three, large, mapped forest plots in Indiana, Virginia, and Wisconsin, USA. We tested whether seedling densities and seedling survival are related to local biotic and abiotic factors with generalized linear mixed models. Spatial point pattern analyses were utilized to determine if the distribution patterns of seedlings and saplings are consistent with a pattern generated by negative density-dependent mortality with respect to conspecific trees. Initial sampled seedling density for nearly a third of species showed a positive correlation with increasing conspecific basal area, indicating dispersal limitation, but few had any association with abiotic variables. By contrast, survival of seedlings over one year significantly declined with increasing conspecific basal area. Point pattern analyses indicated that nearly one-third of tree species had significantly over-dispersed point patterns of conspecific seedlings and saplings relative to adult densities; the majority of other species exhibited random spatial arrangements. Our results demonstrate that negative conspecific density-dependent mortality of seedlings could generate the spatial patterns observed at later life stages. By differentially favoring seedlings of other species, this process may contribute to the maintenance of tree diversity in temperate forests, just as others have demonstrated for tropical forests.

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