Size- and environment-driven seedling survival and growth are mediated by leaf functional traits

Proc Biol Sci. 2022 Sep 28;289(1983):20221400. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1400. Epub 2022 Sep 28.

Abstract

Ecologists usually find that plant demography (e.g. survival and growth) changes along with plant size and environmental gradients, which suggests the effects of ontogeny-related processes and abiotic filtering. However, the role of functional traits underlying the size- and environment-demography relationships is usually overlooked. By measuring individual-level leaf traits of more than 2700 seedlings in a temperate forest, we evaluated how seedling traits mediated the size- and environment-demography relationships. We found leaves were larger for taller seedlings; leaf economics traits were more conservative in taller seedlings and under high-light and low-elevation conditions. Structural equation modelling showed that a higher survival probability for taller seedlings was indirectly driven by their larger leaf area. Although taller seedlings had lower growth rates, larger and more resource-conservative leaves could promote the growth of these tall seedlings. Environmental variables did not influence seedling survival and growth directly but did influence growth indirectly by mediating trait variation. Finally, species-specific variation in traits along with size and environments was associated with the species-specific variation in seedling survival and growth. Our study suggests that not only plant ontogeny- and environment-related ecological processes, but functional traits are also important intermediary agents underlying plant size- and environment-demography relationships.

Keywords: environmental filtering; forest dynamics plot; intraspecific trait variation; plant ontogeny; structural equation modelling.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Forests
  • Phenotype
  • Plant Leaves*
  • Plants
  • Seedlings*

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.7sqv9s4vw