Abstract

In tropical forest communities, seedling recruitment can be limited by the number of fruit produced by adults. Fruit production tends to be highly unequal among trees of the same species, which may be due to environmental factors. We observed fruit production for ~2,000 trees of 17 species across 3 years in a wet tropical forest in Costa Rica. Fruit production was modeled as a function of tree size, nutrient availability, and neighborhood crowding. Following model selection, tree size and neighborhood crowding predicted both the probability of reproduction and the number of fruit produced. Nutrient availability only predicted only the probability of reproduction. In all species, larger trees were more likely to be reproductive and produce more fruit. In addition, number of fruit was strongly negatively related to presence of larger neighboring trees in 13 species; presence of all neighboring trees had a weak‐to‐moderate negative influence on reproductive status in 16 species. Among various metrics of soil nutrient availability, only sum of base cations was positively associated with reproductive status, and for only four species. Synthesis Overall, these results suggest that direct influences on fruit production tend to be mediated through tree size and crowding from neighboring trees, rather than soil nutrients. However, we found variation in the effects of neighbors and nutrients among species; mechanistic studies of allocation to fruit production are needed to explain these differences.

Highlights

  • Tree reproduction affects species composition of the forest under‐ story, as well as the future canopy, and can have long‐lasting effects on the forest community

  • Regeneration is often limited by seed avail‐ ability in tropical tree species, with the abundance of suitable sites for germination being greater than the number of seeds that reach these sites (De Steven & Wright, 2002; Hubbell et al, 1999; Kobe & Vriesendorp, 2009; Svenning & Wright, 2005)

  • Smaller trees were unable to reproduce until they reached a species‐specific size threshold (Figure 4; Minor & Kobe, 2017; Thomas, 1996; Wright et al, 2005) which was directly related to species maximum size

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Tree reproduction affects species composition of the forest under‐ story, as well as the future canopy, and can have long‐lasting effects on the forest community. Fruit production at the individual tree level can be influenced by multiple factors, including seed size, tree size, soil nutrient. Even among large, potentially reproductive individuals of the same species, reproduction is unequal, with most of the fruit being produced by a few individuals (González‐Martínez et al, 2006, Herrera & Jovani, 2010; Minor & Kobe, 2017; Moran & Clark, 2012) This variation among individuals indicates that there are additional factors influencing fruit production in trees. Soil nutrient availability and interactions with neighboring trees may limit fruit production and explain some intraspecific variability in fruit output. Crowding among neighbors may be size‐asymmetric, with larger neighbors being stronger competitors, limiting resources available to smaller trees for reproduction (Wright et al, 2005). We used our model output to test whether seed size was negatively related to fruit production in a subset of species

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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