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Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships

Seed size is a key trait for understanding and predicting ecological processes in a plant community. In a tropical forest, trees and lianas are major components driving ecosystem function and biogeochemical processes. However, seed ecological research on both components remains limited, particularly...

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Autores principales: Pothasin, Pornwiwan, Paradis, Emmanuel, Brockelman, Warren Y., Nathalang, Anuttara, Khemrugka, Thantiyapawn, Lomwong, Noppawan, Thripob, Patcharaphan, Saenprasert, Rampai, Chanthorn, Wirong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9165448/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35668813
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.852167
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author Pothasin, Pornwiwan
Paradis, Emmanuel
Brockelman, Warren Y.
Nathalang, Anuttara
Khemrugka, Thantiyapawn
Lomwong, Noppawan
Thripob, Patcharaphan
Saenprasert, Rampai
Chanthorn, Wirong
author_facet Pothasin, Pornwiwan
Paradis, Emmanuel
Brockelman, Warren Y.
Nathalang, Anuttara
Khemrugka, Thantiyapawn
Lomwong, Noppawan
Thripob, Patcharaphan
Saenprasert, Rampai
Chanthorn, Wirong
author_sort Pothasin, Pornwiwan
collection PubMed
description Seed size is a key trait for understanding and predicting ecological processes in a plant community. In a tropical forest, trees and lianas are major components driving ecosystem function and biogeochemical processes. However, seed ecological research on both components remains limited, particularly phylogenetic patterns and relationships with other traits. Here, we compiled a unique dataset of seed size (seed mass and geometrical size metrics) based on collections of more than 5,200 seeds of 196 woody plant species, covering >98 and 70% of tree and liana stems, respectively, located on a 30-ha plot in a tropical evergreen forest in central Thailand. We aimed to (1) develop allometric equations among seed size metrics to predict seed mass; (2) examine phylogenetic influence on seed size variation; and (3) examine relationships among seed traits and several other functional plant traits. Our allometric equations relating seed mass, seed volume, and width were well-fitted with data (R(2)= 0.94, 0.87 respectively). A phylogenetic signal test found that seed size was randomly distributed across the phylogeny. To study the functional trait relationships, we separately tested seed size data of the tree and liana communities (146 and 50 species, respectively), against mean body size of frugivores, successional niches, leaf, and structural traits. For the tree community, seed size was significantly related to mean body size of frugivores, which we believe is a basic driver of seed size because it is related to the gape width affecting dispersal effectiveness. Nearly all leaf traits were significantly positively correlated with seed size (p < 0.03). The significant positive correlation of leaf area and greenness suggested the high-energy demand of large-seeded species. We found a strong positive correlation between seed size and leaf toughness, suggesting a coordination between seed size and leaf defense. However, all these patterns disappeared in the same analysis applied to the liana community. Liana seed size variation was lower than that of trees, perhaps because lianas grow in relatively more uniform conditions in the forest canopy. Frugivore size was the strongest driver of seed size variation. Our study shows a surprising contrast between trees and lianas that is worth further investigation.
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spelling pubmed-91654482022-06-05 Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships Pothasin, Pornwiwan Paradis, Emmanuel Brockelman, Warren Y. Nathalang, Anuttara Khemrugka, Thantiyapawn Lomwong, Noppawan Thripob, Patcharaphan Saenprasert, Rampai Chanthorn, Wirong Front Plant Sci Plant Science Seed size is a key trait for understanding and predicting ecological processes in a plant community. In a tropical forest, trees and lianas are major components driving ecosystem function and biogeochemical processes. However, seed ecological research on both components remains limited, particularly phylogenetic patterns and relationships with other traits. Here, we compiled a unique dataset of seed size (seed mass and geometrical size metrics) based on collections of more than 5,200 seeds of 196 woody plant species, covering >98 and 70% of tree and liana stems, respectively, located on a 30-ha plot in a tropical evergreen forest in central Thailand. We aimed to (1) develop allometric equations among seed size metrics to predict seed mass; (2) examine phylogenetic influence on seed size variation; and (3) examine relationships among seed traits and several other functional plant traits. Our allometric equations relating seed mass, seed volume, and width were well-fitted with data (R(2)= 0.94, 0.87 respectively). A phylogenetic signal test found that seed size was randomly distributed across the phylogeny. To study the functional trait relationships, we separately tested seed size data of the tree and liana communities (146 and 50 species, respectively), against mean body size of frugivores, successional niches, leaf, and structural traits. For the tree community, seed size was significantly related to mean body size of frugivores, which we believe is a basic driver of seed size because it is related to the gape width affecting dispersal effectiveness. Nearly all leaf traits were significantly positively correlated with seed size (p < 0.03). The significant positive correlation of leaf area and greenness suggested the high-energy demand of large-seeded species. We found a strong positive correlation between seed size and leaf toughness, suggesting a coordination between seed size and leaf defense. However, all these patterns disappeared in the same analysis applied to the liana community. Liana seed size variation was lower than that of trees, perhaps because lianas grow in relatively more uniform conditions in the forest canopy. Frugivore size was the strongest driver of seed size variation. Our study shows a surprising contrast between trees and lianas that is worth further investigation. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9165448/ /pubmed/35668813 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.852167 Text en Copyright © 2022 Pothasin, Paradis, Brockelman, Nathalang, Khemrugka, Lomwong, Thripob, Saenprasert and Chanthorn. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Pothasin, Pornwiwan
Paradis, Emmanuel
Brockelman, Warren Y.
Nathalang, Anuttara
Khemrugka, Thantiyapawn
Lomwong, Noppawan
Thripob, Patcharaphan
Saenprasert, Rampai
Chanthorn, Wirong
Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title_full Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title_fullStr Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title_full_unstemmed Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title_short Seed Size Variation of Trees and Lianas in a Tropical Forest of Southeast Asia: Allometry, Phylogeny, and Seed Trait - Plant Functional Trait Relationships
title_sort seed size variation of trees and lianas in a tropical forest of southeast asia: allometry, phylogeny, and seed trait - plant functional trait relationships
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9165448/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35668813
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.852167
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