Abstract

Understanding the successional process from a disturbed forest to a mature forest is essential for species recovery and conservation initiatives. The resource acquisition and drought tolerance of plants can be instructive to predictions of species abundance and distribution for different forests. However, they have not been adequately tested at different successional stages in karst regions. Here, we selected seven dominant species in an early-succession forest and 17 species in a late-succession forest in a karst region of southwestern China. Resource acquisition-related traits such as hydraulic conductivity and photosynthetic rate, and drought tolerance-related traits, including turgor loss point and wood density, were measured. We found that species in the early-succession forest had a higher hydraulic conductance and photosynthetic rate than those in the late-succession forest, while leaf water potential at turgor loss point and wood density showed nonsignificant differences between the two forests. In addition, we observed a significant negative relationship between photosynthetic rate and drought tolerance in the early-succession forest, which was not identified in late-succession forests. Our study indicates that resource acquisition rather than drought tolerance was the key factor explaining plant distributions in forests at different successional stages in karst regions. We also suggest that the resource acquisition and drought tolerance trade-off hypothesis is not always supported for karst region species. Our study could inform about the design of species replacements in successional forests and provide forest management and restoration guidelines for karst regions.

Highlights

  • The hypothesis that species in both succession forests do not show a trade-off between photosynthetic rate and drought tolerance in k forests do not show a trade-off between photosynthetic rate and drought tolerance in karst regions (H2) was partially supported

  • Our study revealed that resource acquisition tion (An, gs, KS and KL) rather than drought tolerance was the key factor in (An, gs, KS and KL ) rather than drought tolerance was the key factor in explainplaining plant distributions at different successional stages in karst regions

  • We found that resource acquisition rather than drought tolerance was the key factor explaining plant distributions along forest succession in karst regions

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Southwest China contains one of the world’s largest continuous karst zones, with a total area more than 500,000 km. Southwest China contains one of the world’s largest continuous karst zones, with a total area more than 500,000 km2 The forests in this karst zone are extremely species-rich and host many endemic plant species [1]. Most primary forests in karst regions have been substantially disturbed by human activities, and substantial forest degradation has occurred in southwest China [2,3,4]. Understanding the successional process from a disturbed forest to a mature forest is fundamental for species recovery and conservation

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