Differences in forest plant functional trait distributions across land-use and productivity gradients

Am J Bot. 2013 Jul;100(7):1356-68. doi: 10.3732/ajb.1200461. Epub 2013 Jul 3.

Abstract

Premise of study: Plant functional traits are commonly used as proxies for plant responses to environmental challenges, yet few studies have explored how functional trait distributions differ across gradients of land-use change. By comparing trait distributions in intact forests with those across land-use change gradients, we can improve our understanding of the ways land-use change alters the diversity and functioning of plant communities.

Methods: We examined how the variation and distribution of trait values for seven plant functional traits differ between reference natural forest and three types of land-use conversion (pasture, old-field, or "legacy" sites-regrowth following logging), landscape productivity (NPP) and vegetation strata (tree or non-tree "understory"), in a meta-analysis of studies from 15 landscapes across five continents.

Key results: Although trait variation often differed between land-uses within a landscape, these patterns were rarely consistent across landscapes. The variance and distribution of traits were more likely to differ consistently between natural forest and land-use conversion categories for understory (non-tree) plants than for trees. Landscape productivity did not significantly alter the difference in trait variance between natural forest and land-use conversion categories for any trait except dispersal.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that even for traits well linked to plant environmental response strategies, broad classes of land-use change and landscape productivity are not generally useful indicators of the mechanisms driving compositional changes in human-modified forest systems.

Keywords: community assembly; forest regeneration; functional trait variation; land-use change; net primary productivity; secondary forest; trait distributions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Demography
  • Ecosystem*
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Plant Physiological Phenomena*
  • Trees / physiology*