Spatial distribution patterns of Symplocos congeners in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaf forest of southern China

Xiuqing Yang , Haibing Yan , Buhang Li , Youzhi Han , Bo Song

Journal of Forestry Research ›› 2017, Vol. 29 ›› Issue (3) : 773 -784.

PDF
Journal of Forestry Research ›› 2017, Vol. 29 ›› Issue (3) : 773 -784. DOI: 10.1007/s11676-017-0451-2
Original Paper

Spatial distribution patterns of Symplocos congeners in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaf forest of southern China

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

Studies on spatial distribution of congeneric species can supplement our understanding of species ecological processes. We analyzed population structure, spatial distribution, intra- and interspecific associations among six Symplocos tree species on a large (50 ha) plot in a subtropical, evergreen broad-leaf forest in southern China using spatial point pattern analysis methods. Our results suggested that the six Symplocos tree species were all clustered at small scales. The aggregation intensity of S. wikstroemiifolia with low abundance but relatively numerous large-diameter trees was much higher than that of the other five Symplocos species that occurred at high abundance but included few large-diameter trees. Spatial associations among the six congeners showed that 12 of 30 pairs were associated positively at small scales, and 13 of 30 pairs were unrelated. For species among different size classes, 79 of 120 pairs were not correlated, and 17 of 120 pairs were associated positively. These results showed insufficient evidence for interspecific competition and congeneric Symplocos species commonly coexist within subtropical plant communities. The spatial patterns of Symplocos species and their correlations changed with size (DBH) class and were simultaneously affected by spatial scales; the intensity of their aggregation and association decreased with increasing area of the sample plot.

Keywords

Population structure / Spatial patterns / Spatial associations / Symplocos

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Xiuqing Yang, Haibing Yan, Buhang Li, Youzhi Han, Bo Song. Spatial distribution patterns of Symplocos congeners in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaf forest of southern China. Journal of Forestry Research, 2017, 29(3): 773-784 DOI:10.1007/s11676-017-0451-2

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Ackerly DD, Donoghue MJ. Leaf size, sapling allometry, and Corner’s rules: phylogeny and correlated evolution in maples (Acer). Am Nat, 1998, 152: 767-791.

[2]

Alvarez-Loayza P, Terborgh J. Fates of seedling carpets in an Amazonian floodplain forest: Intra-cohort competition or attack by enemies?. J Ecol, 2011, 99: 1045-1054.

[3]

Augspurger CK, Kelly CK. Pathogen mortality of tropical tree seedlings: experimental studies of the effects of dispersal distance, seedling density, and light conditions. Oecologia, 1984, 61: 211-217.

[4]

Bagchi R, Gallery RE, Gripenberg S, Gurr SJ, Narayan L, Addis CE, Freckleton RP, Lewis OT. Pathogens and insect herbivores drive rainforest plant diversity and composition. Nature, 2014, 506: 85-88.

[5]

Bell T, Freckleton RP, Lewis OT. Plant pathogens drive density-dependent seedling mortality in a tropical tree. Ecol Lett, 2006, 9: 569-574.

[6]

Beltrán E, Valiente-Banuet A, VerdúVerd M. Trait divergence and indirect interactions allow facilitation of congeneric species. Ann Bot, 2012, 110: 1369-1376.

[7]

Bevill RL, Louda SM. Comparisons of related rare and common species in the study of plant rarity. Conserv Biol, 1999, 13: 493-498.

[8]

Bunyavejchewin S, LaFrankie JV, Baker PJ, Kanzaki M, Ashton PS, Yamakura T. Spatial distribution patterns of the dominant canopy dipterocarp species in a seasonal dry evergreen forest in western Thailand. For Ecol Manag, 2003, 175: 87-101.

[9]

Cipriotti PA, Aguiar MR. Effects of grazing on patch structure in a semi-arid two-phase vegetation mosaic. J Veg Sci, 2005, 16: 57-66.

[10]

Comita LS, Muller-Landau HC, Aguilar S, Hubbell SP. Asymmetric density dependence shapes species abundances in a tropical tree community. Science, 2010, 329: 330-332.

[11]

Condit R. Tropical forest census plots: methods and results from Barro Colorado Island, Panama and a Comparison with other plots, 1998, Berlin: Springer 17 19

[12]

Condit R, Ashton PS, Baker PJ, Bunyavejchewin S, Gunatilleke S, Gunatilleke N, Hubbell SP, Foster RB, Itoh A, LaFrankie JV, Lee HS, Losos E, Manokaran N, Sukumar R, Yamakura T. Spatial patterns in the distribution of common and rare tropical tree species. Science, 2000, 288: 1414-1418.

[13]

Connell JH. Den Boer PJ, Gradwell GR. On the role of natural enemies in preventing competitive exclusion in some marine animals and in rain forest trees. Dynamics of numbers in populations, 1971, Wageningen: Center for Agricultural Publication and Documentation 298 312

[14]

Cowling RM. Levin SA. Endemism. Encyclopedia of biodiversity, 2001, San Diego: Academic Press 497 507

[15]

Davies SJ, Palmiotto PA, Ashton PS, Lee HS, Lafrankie JV. Comparative ecology of 11 sympatric species of Macaranga in Borneo: tree distribution in relation to horizontal and vertical resource heterogeneity. J Ecol, 1998, 86: 662-673.

[16]

Editorial Board for Flora of China, Chinese Academy of Sciences. The sixtieth volumes of Flora of China (second fascicule), 1974, Beijing: Science Press 1 8 (in Chinese)

[17]

Felinks B, Wiegand T. Exploring spatiotemporal patterns in early stages of primary succession on former lignite mining sites. J Veg Sci, 2008, 19: 267-276.

[18]

Fritsch PW, Kelly LM, Wang Y, Almeda F, Kriebel R. Revised infrafamilial classification of Symplocaceae based on phylogenetic data from DNA sequences and morphology. Taxon, 2008, 57: 823-852.

[19]

Gao M, Wang X, Wang D. Species spatial distribution analysis using nearest neighbor methods: aggregation and self-similarity. Ecol Res, 2014, 29: 341-349.

[20]

Grubb PJ. Maintenance of species-richness in plant communities: the importance of the regeneration niche. Biol Rev, 1977, 52: 107-145.

[21]

Hammond DS, Brown VK (1998) Disturbance, phenology and life-history characteristics: factors influencing distance/density-dependent attack on tropical seeds and seedlings. In: Dynamics of tropical communities: the 37th symposium of the British Ecological Society, Cambridge University, pp 51–78

[22]

Harms KE, Wright SJ, Calderon O, Hernandez A, Herre EA. Pervasive density-dependent recruitment enhances seedling diversity in a tropical forest. Nature, 2000, 404: 493-495.

[23]

He F, Legendre P, LaFrankie JV. Distribution patterns of tree species in a Malaysian tropical rain forest. J Veg Sci, 1997, 8: 105-114.

[24]

Howe HF. Scatter-and clump-dispersal and seedling demography: hypothesis and implications. Oecologia, 1989, 79: 417-426.

[25]

Hubbell SP, Ahumada JA, Condit R, Foster RB. Local neighborhood effects on long-term survival of individual trees in a neotropical forest. Ecol Res, 2001, 16: 859-875.

[26]

Iida Y, Kohyama T, Swenson NG, Su SH, Chen CT, Chiang JM, Sun IF. Linking functional traits and demographic rates in a subtropical tree community: the importance of size dependency. J Ecol, 2014, 102: 641-650.

[27]

Inman-Narahari F, Ostertag R, Asner GP, Cordell S, Hubbell SP, Sack L. Trade-offs in seedling growth and survival within and across tropical forest microhabitats. Ecol Evol, 2014, 4: 3755-3767.

[28]

Jansen PA, Visser MD, Wright SJ, Rutten G, Muller-Landau HC. Negative density dependence of seed dispersal and seedling recruitment in a Neotropical palm. Ecol Lett, 2014, 17: 1111-1120.

[29]

Janzen DH. Herbivores and the number of tree species in tropical forests. Am Nat, 1970, 104: 501-528.

[30]

Kikvidze Z, Pugnaire FI, Brooker RW, Choler P, Lortie CJ, Michalet R, Callaway RM. Linking patterns and processes in alpine plant communities: a global study. Ecology, 2005, 86: 1395-1400.

[31]

Lan G, Getzin S, Wiegand T, Hu Y, Xie G, Zhu H, Cao M. Spatial distribution and interspecific associations of tree species in a tropical seasonal rain forest of China. PLoS ONE, 2012, 7: e46074.

[32]

Li L, Ye WH, Wei SG, Lian JY, Huang ZL. Spatial Patterns and Associations between Species Belonging to Four Genera of the Lauraceae Family. PLoS ONE, 2014, 9: e111500.

[33]

Liao J, Bogaert J, Nijs I. Species interactions determine the spatial mortality patterns emerging in plant communities after extreme events. Sci Rep, 2015, 5: 11229.

[34]

Lloyd KM, Lee WG, Wilson JB. Competitive abilities of rare and common plants: comparisons using Acaena (Rosaceae) and Chionochloa (Poaceae) from New Zealand. Conserv Biol, 2002, 16: 975-985.

[35]

Mooney KA, Jones P, Agrawal AA. Coexisting congeners: demography, competition, and interactions with cardenolides for two milkweed-feeding aphids. Oikos, 2008, 117: 450-458.

[36]

Nagel TA, Svobodab M, Diacia J. Regeneration patterns after intermediate wind disturbance in an old-growth Fagus-Abies forest in southeastern Slovenia. For Ecol Manag, 2006, 226: 268-278.

[37]

Queenborough SA, Burslem DFRP, Garwood NC, Valencia R. Habitat niche partitioning by 16 species of Myristicaceae in Amazonian Ecuador. Plant Ecol, 2007, 192: 193-207.

[38]

Seri E, Shnerb NM. Spatial patterns in the tropical forest reveal connections between negative feedback, aggregation and abundance. J Theor Biol, 2015, 380: 247-255.

[39]

Shuai F, Wang Y, Yu S. Density dependence in forests is stronger in tropical and subtropical climates among closely related species. Ecography, 2014, 37: 659-669.

[40]

Simon MF, Hay JD. Comparison of a common and rare species of Mimosa (Mimosaceae) in Central Brazil. Austral Ecol, 2003, 28: 315-326.

[41]

Swenson NG, Enquist BJ, Pither J, Thompson J, Zimmerman J. The problem and promise of scale dependency in community phylogenetics. Ecology, 2006, 87: 2418-2424.

[42]

Terborgh J. Enemies maintain hyperdiverse tropical forests. Am Nat, 2012, 179: 303-314.

[43]

Wang X, Swenson NG, Wiegand T, Wolf AT, Howe R, Lin F, Ye J, Yuan Z, Shi S, Bai X, Xing D, Hao Z. Phylogenetic and functional diversity area relationship in two temperate forests. Ecography, 2013, 36: 883-893.

[44]

Wang X, Wiegand T, Swenson NG, Wolf AT, Howe RW, Hao Z, Lin F, Ye J, Yuan Z. Mechanisms underlying local functional and phylogenetic beta diversity in two temperate forests. Ecology, 2015, 96: 1062-1073.

[45]

Webb CO, Ackerly DD, McPeek MA, Donoghue MJ. Phylogenies and community ecology. Annu Rev Ecol Syst, 2002, 33: 475-505.

[46]

Wiegand T, Moloney KA. Rings, circles, and null-models for point pattern analysis in ecology. Oikos, 2004, 104: 209-229.

[47]

Wiegand T, Gunatilleke S, Gunatilleke N. Species associations in a heterogeneous Sri Lankan dipterocarp forest. Am Nat, 2007, 170: e77-e95.

[48]

Wiegand T, He F, Hubbell SP. A systematic comparison of summary characteristics for quantifying point patterns in ecology. Ecography, 2012, 35: 1-12.

[49]

Xu M, Yu S. Elevational variation in density dependence in a subtropical forest. Ecol Evol, 2014, 4: 2823-2833.

[50]

Zhang J, Song B, Li BH, Ye J, Wang XG, Hao ZQ. Spatial pattern and associations of six congeneric species in an old-growth temperate forest. Acta Oecol, 2010, 36: 29-38.

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

152

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/