Abstract

Reproductive phenologies of plants are constrained by climate in highly seasonal regions. In contrast, plants growing in wet tropical forests are freed from many abiotic constraints, which in canopy tree communities lead to a rich diversity of phenological patterns within and among individuals, species and communities. However, basic descriptions of tropical phenological patterns and the processes that shape them are rare. Here, we document the individual-, population-, and landscape-level phenological patterns of two dominant families of understory woody plants important to avian frugivores, the Melastomataceae and Rubiaceae, along an elevational transect in Costa Rica. The 226 individual plants belonging to 35 species in this study, varied in the number of reproductive bouts/year, and the timing, duration, and synchrony of reproductive stages. This variation was not related to factors related to their interactions with mutualists and antagonists, nor did it appear to be constrained by phylogeny. Diverse phenological patterns among species led to relatively aseasonal patterns at the community and landscape level. Overall, evidence for biotic processes shaping temporal patterns of fruiting phenology was weak or absent. These findings reveal a number of unexplained patterns, and suggest that factors shaping phenology in relatively aseasonal forests operate in idiosyncratic ways at the species level.

Highlights

  • Reproductive phenologies of plants are constrained by climate in highly seasonal regions

  • Interest in phenological patterns and the processes controlling them has increased dramatically in recent years, in part due to growing interest in how changing climate affects the timing of life cycles of plants

  • Recent phenological studies have primarily focused on temperate communities, in which phenologies are constrained by seasonality of temperature and moisture regimes (Ting et al 2008)

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Summary

MATERIALS AND Methods

We studied phenology at three sites along an elevational gradient in and near the 47. We monitored plants in each month of 2004, spending one week per site per month We chose these sites because, despite their proximity (15km between most distant sites), they span major biotic and abiotic gradients while sharing many plant species. Forests at this site are classified as lowland tropical wet (Holdridge 1967), have a mean annual temperature of 25.6oC, and receive a mean annual rainfall of 4 306mm (±SE 101mm). All 35 species in the Melastomataceae and Rubiaceae included in this study summarizing phenological pattern (i.e., annual (A), sub-annual (S), continual (C)), minimum reproductive size, n marked individuals, plant density by elevation, and month of maximum fruit production rate

Miconia multispicata Naudin
Fruiting phenologyc
Ripe fruit
We used monthly rainfall totals from the
Proportion of species
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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