Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the factors shaping species distribution patterns along tropical rainfall gradients is necessary to predict the consequences of climate change for tropical tree communities. Direct effects of water availability exclude wet forest species from dry forests, but the exclusion of dry forest species from wet forests remains unexplained. We tested the hypothesis that high light and nutrient requirements exclude dry forest species from dark, infertile, wet forests. We transplanted seedlings of 26 woody species to six sites along a pronounced regional rainfall gradient across the Isthmus of Panama. We examined the effects of soil moisture, phosphorus and light availability, and species' drought resistance on seedling performance, and linked the results directly to known species distribution patterns. Surprisingly, seedlings of wet forest species did not exhibit a home advantage: All species survived better under moister conditions, and the effects of phosphorus availability and light on seedling performance did not differ among species from dry or wet forests. Instead, dry forest species had intrinsically slower growth rates than wet forest species, which may lead to their exclusion from wet forests at later life history stages. High phosphorus exacerbated susceptibility to drought, although the mechanism remains unknown. Overall, our results demonstrate that seedling performance across tropical rainfall gradients is determined primarily by variation in soil water availability across space and time, while variation in nutrient and light availability plays a lesser role. Future changes in rainfall patterns will therefore have direct and pervasive consequences for forest composition and ecosystem function.

Highlights

  • Tropical forests are among the most diverse plant communities on earth

  • The controls of diversity and species distribution patterns in such species-rich communities remain a central question in ecology

  • We focused on the seedling stage, which should be especially vulnerable to environmental stressors and is a bottleneck in population dynamics (Harper 1977)

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical forests are among the most diverse plant communities on earth. The controls of diversity and species distribution patterns in such species-rich communities remain a central question in ecology. The most prominent pattern of diversity in tropical forests is an increase in species richness (i.e., a-diversity) with increasing rainfall and decreasing dry season length (ter Steege 2003, Davidar et al 2005). The change in forest composition (i.e., b-diversity) is extremely high along tropical rainfall gradients (Condit 2002) and species distribution patterns vary with rainfall (Swaine 1996, Engelbrecht et al 2007, Condit et al 2013). While these patterns are well documented, the underlying causes remain poorly understood. Given that pronounced changes in rainfall are projected for the tropics (Hidalgo et al 2013, IPCC 2013), with potentially dramatic yet highly uncertain consequences for tree communities

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