It takes a village to grow a tree: most tree species benefit from dissimilar neighbors

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22 décembre 2023

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  • handle:  10670/1.oy931d
  • Di Maurizio, Vanessa; Searle, Eric B et Paquette, Alain (2023). « It takes a village to grow a tree: most tree species benefit from dissimilar neighbors ». Ecology and Evolution, 13(12), e10804.
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Ce document est lié à :
http://archipel.uqam.ca/17259/

Ce document est lié à :
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.1 [...]

Ce document est lié à :
doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10804

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Speciation (Biology)

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Vanessa Di Maurizio et al., « It takes a village to grow a tree: most tree species benefit from dissimilar neighbors », UQAM Archipel : articles scientifiques, ID : 10670/1.oy931d


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Scientific consensus is that diverse tree species positively impact forest productivity, especially when species are functionally dissimilar. Under the complementarity hypothesis, differences in species traits reduce competition among neighboring tree species. However, while this relationship has been extensively studied at the community level, there is a lack of understanding regarding how individuals of different species specifically respond to a functionally dissimilar neighborhood. In this study, we used permanent plots from Quebec, Canada, and 19 focal tree species to test whether: (1) tree growth response to neighborhood dissimilarity varies with their identity and competition intensity, and (2) focal tree species’ traits explain their response to neighborhood dissimilarity. We demonstrate that: tree growth is primarily influenced by competition, species identity, and their interactions, but that dissimilarity, alone and in interaction with the main drivers of tree growth, explains an additional 1.8% of the variation in species growth. Within this context, (1) most species’ respond positively to neighborhood dissimilarity, with magnitude being species and competition dependent, and (2) focal tree traits partly explain these dependencies, with shade-intolerant species benefiting most from dissimilar neighbors under high competition. Our study provides empirical support for the complementarity hypothesis, emphasizing the small but consistent positive effect of functional dissimilarity on tree growth in local neighborhoods. Our findings identify the species with the highest potential of benefiting from dissimilar neighbors but also demonstrate that the positive effect of neighborhood dissimilarity is not limited to a select few species with specific traits; rather, it is observed across a diverse range of species. The cumulative growth responses of individuals to functionally dissimilar neighbors may help explain the commonly observed higher productivity in more diverse communities.

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