Abstract

Summary Shade tolerance can be defined as the light level at which plants can survive and possibly grow. This light level is referred to as the whole‐plant light compensation point (LCP). The LCP depends on multiple leaf and architectural traits. We are still uncertain how often interspecific trait differences allow species to specialize for separate light niches, as observed between shade‐tolerant species and light‐demanding species. Alternatively, trait plasticity may allow many species to grow in similar light conditions. We measured leaf and architectural traits of up to 1.5‐year‐old seedlings of 15 sympatric Psychotria shrub species grown at three light levels. We used a 3D plant model to estimate the impacts of leaf traits, architectural traits and plant size on the whole‐plant light compensation point (LCPplant). Plant growth rates were estimated from destructive harvests and allometric relationships. At lower light levels, plants of all species achieved a lower leaf light compensation point (LCPleaf). The light interception efficiency (LIE), an index of self‐shading, decreased with increasing plant size and was therefore lower in high‐light treatments where plants grew more rapidly. When corrected for size, LIE was lower in the low‐light treatment, possibly as a result of lower investments in woody support. Species did not show trade‐offs in growth under low‐ and high‐light conditions, because species with the greatest plasticity in LCPplant and underlying traits (LCPleaf and LIE) achieved the highest growth rates at lower light levels. Synthesis. The interspecific differences in LCPplant did not result in a growth or survival trade‐off between low‐ and high‐light conditions. Instead, these differences were more than offset by the greater plasticity in LCPplant in some species, which was driven by greater plasticity in both leaves and architecture. The most plastic species achieved the fastest growth at different light levels. The results show that plasticity largely neutralizes the separation of light niches amongst species in this forest understorey genus and imply that differential preferences of species for either gaps or forest understorey occur in later life phases or are driven by other stress factors than low light alone.

Highlights

  • The shade tolerance of a plant can be characterized by the minimum light level required for survival and growth

  • The results show that plasticity largely neutralizes the separation of light niches amongst species in this forest understorey genus and imply that differential preferences of species for either gaps or forest understorey occur in later life phases or are driven by other stress factors than low light alone

  • The plant light compensation point is a unifying concept for comparing shade tolerances across plants (Craine et al 2012) but has been applied for across-species comparisons in only few cases (Baltzer & Thomas 2007; Lusk et al 2011; Sterck et al 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

The shade tolerance of a plant can be characterized by the minimum light level required for survival and growth. Plants may achieve a low LCP by a low leaf compensation point (LCPleaf), which depends on the light response curve of leaf photosynthesis, as well as by displaying the leaves such that the amount of self-shading among leaves is reduced (Horn 1971). If these properties result in a low assimilation capacity of plants under high-light conditions (Sterck et al 2011), the species that specialises for shade may have slower growth and lower competitive ability at such high-light conditions (Kobe 1996; Sterck, Poorter & Schieving 2006). Plant architecture and size influence shade tolerance, but it remains a challenge to separate their effects on possible shade tolerance/ growth trade-offs across species, because they are functionally interdependent (Pearcy, Muraoka & Valladares 2005) and plastic in their response to heterogeneous light conditions (Valladares et al 2000; Sterck & Bongers 2001)

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