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Universitas Hasanuddin
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Differences in growth trajectory and strategy of two sympatric congeneric species in an Indonesian floodplain forest

Yamada T.

American Journal of Botany

Q1
Published: 2005Citations: 19

Abstract

Whole-plant development trajectories and sapling leaf displays were compared for two sympatric congeneric species, Pterospermum diversifolium and P. javanicum, in a tropical floodplain forest in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. We assessed their growth strategies and developed hypotheses for their coexistence within the community. Pterospermum diversifolium retains a monoaxial growth habit that promotes quick stem elongation; thus, it is taller when branches are initiated than is P. javanicum. The species differed significantly in height growth and total crown expansion per unit increment of biomass: monoaxial P. diversifolium saplings devote more effort to stem elongation, whereas branched P. javanicum saplings devote more effort to branch expansion. Monoaxial P. diversifolium sustained more severe self-shading than P. javanicum. The sapling growth strategy of P. diversifolium appears to be dynamic, emphasizing the opportunistic use of light following a disturbance, whereas that of P. javanicum appears to be static, optimizing leaf display for current light conditions. The advantages of these strategies depend on context, and the two species may coexist within a community by adopting different regeneration niches based on differing understory light conditions: P. diversifolium is favored over P. javanicum at high light levels, but the opposite is true at low light levels.

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10.3732/ajb.92.1.45

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BiologySciences
Sympatric speciationSciences
Context (archaeology)Sciences
UnderstorySciences
Biomass (ecology)Sciences
FloodplainSciences
Shade toleranceSciences
BotanySciences
EcologySciences
CanopySciences
PaleontologySciences