Abstract

Mechanisms of interactions between Douglas—fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and red alder (Alnus rubra) seedlings were assessed in experimentally manipulated stands. The density of each species was varied systematically, creating a matrix of competitive regimes that consisted of five monoculture densities and 25 mixtures of all possible pairwise combinations of the monoculture densities. Response surfaces for growth rates, leaf area, photon flux density, soil moisture content and depletion, and plant water potential were generated within the matrix. Regression coefficients quantified the effects of species densities on response variables, and correlation analysis yielded insight into interrelationships between variables. Tree performance, leaf area per square metre of ground surface area, resources, and physiological variables were all quantitatively altered by alder density, Douglas—fir density, and the interaction between species densities. Alder was the dominant competitor and overtopped the Douglas—fir. Competition for light was mediated by density effects on the leaf area of each species per square metre of ground surface area. Increasing alder leaf area reduced the light reaching the understory Douglas—fir. In contrast, increasing Douglas—fir leaf areas increased the light penetrating through to the understory conifers, due to Douglas—fir's suppression of alder leaf area per square metre. Soil moisture limitations were also created by increasing the density of both species and resulted in increasingly negative leaf water potentials for both species. Growth rates concurrently declined as plant water stress increased. Response variables were assembled into a conceptual modeling proposing how species density regulated growth through the interactions between resource limitations and impairment of physiological function.

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