Data from: Soil-mediated filtering organizes tree assemblages in regenerating tropical forests
1.Secondary forests are increasingly dominant in human-modified tropical landscapes, but the drivers of forest recovery remain poorly understood. Soil conditions influence plant community composition, and are expected to change over a gradient of succession. However, the role of soil conditions as a...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1.Secondary forests are increasingly dominant in human-modified tropical
landscapes, but the drivers of forest recovery remain poorly understood.
Soil conditions influence plant community composition, and are expected to
change over a gradient of succession. However, the role of soil conditions
as an environmental filter driving community assembly during forest
succession has rarely been explicitly assessed. 2.We evaluated the role of
stand basal area and soil conditions on community assembly and its
consequences for community functional properties along a chronosequence of
Atlantic forest regeneration following sugar cane cultivation.
Specifically, we tested whether community functional properties are
related to stand basal area, soil fertility and soil moisture. Our
expectations were that edaphic environmental filters play an increasingly
important role along secondary succession by increasing functional trait
convergence towards more conservative attributes. 3.We sampled soil and
woody vegetation features across 15 second-growth (3-30 years) and 11
old-growth forest plots (300 m² each). We recorded tree functional traits
related to resource-use strategies (specific leaf area, SLA; leaf dry
matter content, LDMC; leaf area, LA; leaf thickness, LT; and leaf
succulence, LS) and calculated community functional properties using the
community-weighted mean (CWM) of each trait and the functional dispersion
(FDis) of each trait separately and all traits together. 4.With exception
of LA, all leaf traits were strongly associated with stand basal area;
LDMC and SLA increased, while LT and LS decreased with forest development.
Such changes in LDMC, LT and LS were also related to the decrease in soil
nutrient availability and pH along succession, while soil moisture was
weakly related to community functional properties. Considering all traits,
as well as leaf thickness and succulence separately, FDis strongly
decreased with increasing basal area and decreasing soil fertility along
forest succession, presenting the lowest values in old-growth forests.
5.Synthesis. Our findings suggest that tropical forest regeneration may be
a deterministic process shaped by soil conditions. Soil fertility operates
as a key filter causing functional convergence towards more conservative
resource-use strategies, such as leaves with higher leaf dry mass content. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.p592s |