Abstract

1. We tested the hypothesis of Langenheim and Stubblebine that differences in chemical composition between maternal trees and the seedlings under them arise from differential mortality; only seedlings different from the mother survive. Such mortality could explain at least some of the cases where seedlings accumulate under adult conspecifics, contrary to the extreme form of the Janzen–Connell hypothesis. 2. We investigated Nectandra ambigens (Lauraceae), an upper‐canopy tree at Los Tuxtlas tropical rain forest, Mexico, whose seedlings survive under the canopy of conspecific trees. We analysed chromatographic profiles of leaf terpenoids of 15 groups, each formed by an adult tree and its surrounding seedlings. 3. We predicted that seedlings chemically similar to the adult would be absent under the tree canopy and that they would be present outside that canopy. We also predicted that younger seedlings would be more similar to the adult than the older ones. 4. Chemical similarity analyses showed that most seedlings were significantly different from their closest adult and thus supported the Langenheim and Stubblebine hypothesis. However, we did not find chemical differentiation among seedlings regarding their age or their position inside or outside the tree canopy.

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