Responses of tropical forest tree seedlings to irradiance and the derivation
of a light response index
Agyeman VK, Swaine MD, Thompson J
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
87 (5): 815-827 OCT 1999
Abstract:
1 Seedlings of 16 West African timber tree species were grown in six neutral
shade-houses with irradiances 2%, 6%, 10%, 28%, 44% and 66% of unshaded values.
2 Tested species included well-known pioneers, which showed negative growth in 2% irradiance but which responded strongly to increased irradiance, and very shade-tolerant non-pioneers, which had positive growth in 2% irradiance but responded only slightly to increased irradiance.
3 For all species, maximum growth occurred at an irradiance varying between
10% and 44%. The inhibition of growth at higher irradiance was greater in the
more shade-tolerant species.
4 Data from growth analyses were used in a principal components analysis to
quantify the species' positions on a light response gradient. The growth variables
most strongly correlated with this gradient were relative growth rate (RGR)
and relative diameter growth in 2% irradiance, and also apparent quantum efficiency
and leaf mortality rate in both 2% and 66% irradiance. These results draw attention
to the importance of performance in deep forest shade in defining differences
among tropical forest tree species.
5 The second (independent) axis of the principal components analysis separated
three species that are known from other experiments to be drought tolerant.
Other species' traits of functional significance (adult deciduousness, seed
size, seed dispersal) were only weakly, if at all, associated with the gradient
of light response.
6 Possible methods for efficient placement of other species on the gradient
of light response are discussed. Formulation of standardized conditions simulating
deep shade would allow diameter growth to be used as a simple non-destructive
measure of a species' position on the gradient of light response, which could
then be applied to any tropical forest flora.
Author Keywords:
growth analysis, non-pioneers, pioneers, principal components analysis, shade
tolerance
KeyWords Plus:
SOIL FERTILITY, PHOTOSYNTHESIS, GROWTH
Addresses:
Swaine MD, Univ Ghana, Forestry Res Inst, POB 63, Kumasi, Ghana
Univ Ghana, Forestry Res Inst, Kumasi, Ghana
Univ Aberdeen, Dept Plant & Soil Sci, Aberdeen, Scotland
Publisher:
BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD, P O BOX 88, OSNEY MEAD, OXFORD OX2 0NE, OXON, ENGLAND
IDS Number:
255RG
ISSN:
0022-0477