Abstract
Research Highlights: We demonstrate the first quantitative evidence that the shoot shedding of fast-growing species growing in a high-light environment is part of the process of shoot redeployment into better-lit outer parts of the crown. Background and Objectives: Light foraging by redeploying organs from shaded regions of a tree crown into better-lit regions is considered to apply to both leaves and shoots. To date, however, this hypothesis has never been tested for shoots. Materials and Methods: We investigated the shoot dynamics of saplings of five deciduous woody species. We included fast-growing and slow-growing species (Alnus sieboldiana Matsum., Castanea crenata Siebold & Zucc., Betula ermanii Cham., Acer distylum Siebold & Zucc., and Fagus crenata Blume). Results: Shoots in the shaded regions of the crowns of the fast-growing trees showed higher mortality rates than those at better-lit positions. Because of the selective shedding of the shaded shoots, at the end of the growth period the light environment experienced by the shoots that survived until the following spring was similar to that at the early stage of the same growth period. By contrast, the slow-growing trees displayed slow and determinate growth, with a very low mortality rate of shoots at all positions in the crown. Conclusions: The rapid shoot turnover of the fast-growing species resulted in the redeployment of shoots into better-lit positions within the tree crown in a manner similar to the redeployment of leaves.
Highlights
A plant canopy is a dynamically changing system due to the continuous production, growth, and death of leaves and shoots [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]
We investigated the two-way interactions between the within-crown light environment and shoot dynamics of saplings of five temperate, winter-deciduous woody plants that included fast- and slow-growing species grown in open, well-lit places
For the two fast-growing species (A. sieboldiana and C. crenata), which had indeterminate growth patterns, we investigated seasonal changes of the light environment within each canopy by conducting the same measurements twice during the same growth period in 2002 for all the shoots
Summary
A plant canopy is a dynamically changing system due to the continuous production, growth, and death of leaves and shoots [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]. The light environment within a canopy changes temporally during plant growth [1,9,10,14,16]. The dynamics of the aboveground parts of plants are driven by three processes: the production, growth, and death of leaves and shoots. Plants in different light environments differ in their shoot dynamics. In low-light environments (e.g., forest understories), plants may accelerate the shedding of their shaded, lower-positioned leaves or shoots because of their negative carbon balances [1]
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