Abstract

Ecosystem services of Amazonian forests are disproportionally produced by a limited set of hyperdominant tree species. Yet the spatial variation in the delivery of ecosystem services by individual hyperdominant species across their distribution ranges and corresponding environmental gradients is poorly understood. Here, we use the concept of habitat quality to unravel the effect of environmental gradients on seed production and aboveground biomass (AGB) of the Brazil nut, one of Amazonia’s largest and most long-lived hyperdominants. We find that a range of climate and soil gradients create trade-offs between density and fitness of Brazil nut trees. Density responses to environmental gradients were in line with predictions under the Janzen–Connell and Herms–Mattson hypotheses, whereas tree fitness responses were in line with resource requirements of trees over their life cycle. These trade-offs resulted in divergent responses in area-based seed production and AGB. While seed production and AGB of individual trees (i.e., fitness) responded similarly to most environmental gradients, they showed opposite tendencies to tree density for almost half of the gradients. However, for gradients creating opposite fitness-density responses, area-based seed production was invariable, while trends in area-based AGB tended to mirror the response of tree density. We conclude that while the relation between environmental gradients and tree density is generally indicative of the response of AGB accumulation in a given area of forest, this is not necessarily the case for fruit production.

Highlights

  • Amazonian rainforests generate vital ecosystem services (Strand et al, 2018)

  • Our findings show that the environmental gradients we considered generated approximately 50% congruent and 50% divergent responses of fitness variables [seed production (SPt) or aboveground biomass (AGBt)] on the one hand and tree density on the other

  • While we accept our first hypothesis for AGB, we partly reject it for seed production

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Summary

Introduction

Amazonian rainforests generate vital ecosystem services (Strand et al, 2018). They harbor the largest plant biodiversity on Earth (ter Steege et al, 2013), represent the biggest pool of tropical carbon (Brienen et al, 2015), and are an important source of timber (Rutishauser et al, 2015) and non-timber products (Shackleton et al, 2011). The spatial variation in the delivery of ecosystem services by individual hyperdominant species across their distribution ranges and corresponding environmental gradients remains understudied. To understand the effect of spatial variation on the delivery of ecosystem services by a tree species, one must understand how tree density and individual tree performance vary along environmental gradients

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