Crown damage and the mortality of tropical trees
0106 biological sciences
Tropical Climate
Stress, Physiological
Malaysia
Forests
15. Life on land
Models, Biological
Wood
01 natural sciences
Ecosystem
Trees
DOI:
10.1111/nph.15381
Publication Date:
2018-08-02T16:45:03Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Summary
What causes individual tree death in tropical forests remains a major gap in our understanding of the biology of tropical trees and leads to significant uncertainty in predicting global carbon cycle dynamics.
We measured individual characteristics (diameter at breast height, wood density, growth rate, crown illumination and crown form) and environmental conditions (soil fertility and habitat suitability) for 26 425 trees ≥ 10 cm diameter at breast height belonging to 416 species in a 52‐ha plot in Lambir Hills National Park, Malaysia. We used structural equation models to investigate the relationships among the different factors and tree mortality.
Crown form (a proxy for mechanical damage and other stresses) and prior growth were the two most important factors related to mortality. The effect of all variables on mortality (except habitat suitability) was substantially greater than expected by chance.
Tree death is the result of interactions between factors, including direct and indirect effects. Crown form/damage and prior growth mediated most of the effect of tree size, wood density, fertility and habitat suitability on mortality. Large‐scale assessment of crown form or status may result in improved prediction of individual tree death at the landscape scale.
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