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Demographic consequences of chromatic leaf defence in tropical tree communities: Do red young leaves increase growth and survival?

  • Simon A. Queenborough*
  • , Margaret R. Metz
  • , Renato Valencia
  • , S. Joseph Wright
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

BackgroundMany tropical forest tree species delay greening their leaves until full expansion. This strategy is thought to provide newly flushing leaves with protection against damage by herbivores by keeping young leaves devoid of nutritive value. Because young leaves suffer the greatest predation from invertebrate herbivores, delayed greening could prevent costly tissue loss. Many species that delay greening also produce anthocyanin pigments in their new leaves, giving them a reddish tint. These anthocyanins may be fungicidal, protect leaves against UV damage or make leaves cryptic to herbivores blind to the red part of the spectrum.MethodsA comprehensive survey was undertaken of seedlings, saplings and mature trees in two diverse tropical forests: a rain forest in western Amazonia (Yasuní National Park, Ecuador) and a deciduous forest in Central America (Barro Colorado Island, Panamá). A test was made of whether individuals and species with delayed greening or red-coloured young leaves showed lower mortality or higher relative growth rates than species that did not.Key resultsAt both Yasuní and Barro Colorado Island, species with delayed greening or red young leaves comprised significant proportions of the seedling and tree communities. At both sites, significantly lower mortality was found in seedlings and trees with delayed greening and red-coloured young leaves. While there was little effect of leaf colour on the production of new leaves of seedlings, diameter relative growth rates of small trees were lower in species with delayed greening and red-coloured young leaves than in species with regular green leaves, and this effect remained when the trade-off between mortality and growth was accounted for.ConclusionsHerbivores exert strong selection pressure on seedlings for the expression of defence traits. A delayed greening or red-coloured young leaf strategy in seedlings appears to be associated with higher survival for a given growth rate, and may thus influence the species composition of later life stages.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)677-684
Number of pages8
JournalAnnals of Botany
Volume112
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2013

Funding

We are extremely grateful to Lissy Coley and Tom Kursar for allowing us to use data they collected in Panamá, as well as providing many insightful comments on the manuscript. We further thank Kasey Barton and two anonymous reviewers for many helpful comments on the manuscript, and Kasey Barton and Mick Hanley for inviting M.R.M. and S.A.Q. to the seedling herbivory special symposium at ESA 2012. We thank Laura Mason for help with database management. R.V. thanks PUCE for granting him a sabbatical year and the University of Aarhus for offering research facilities during this year. We appreciate the hard work of the many field assistants who have diligently surveyed the seedling and tree communities in Yasuní and BCI for many years, especially Anelio Loor, Everaldo Zambrano and Milton Zambrano at Yasuní, and A. Hernandez and R. Gonzalez at BCI. We thank the Ministerio del Medio-ambiente of Ecuador for permission to carry out fieldwork in YasuníNational Park and within the YasuníForest Dynamics Plot. Both the Yasuníand BCI Forest Dynamics Plots are associated to the Center for Tropical Forest Science, a global network of large-scale demographic tree plots. The Yasuníseedling census is supported via the National Science Foundation’s LTREB programme under grants DEB-1122634 and DEB-0614525, as well as grants from the Center for Tropical Forest Science at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute and from the University of California, Berkeley. The YasuníFDP was supported by SENESCYT ( project 300) in 2011. The Forest Dynamics Plot of YasuníNational Park has been made possible throughthegeneroussupportofthePontificalCatholicUniversity of Ecuador (PUCE) funds of donaciones del impuesto a la renta, the government of Ecuador, the US National Science Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute and the University of Aarhus of Denmark. The Environmental Sciences Program of the Smithsonian Institution supported the seedling studies at BCI.

FundersFunder number
Center for Tropical Forest Science
US National Science Foundation
University of Aarhus of Denmark
National Science Foundation1122325, DEB-1122634, 1122634, DEB-0614525
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
University of California Berkeley
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Secretaría de Educación Superior, Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación300

    Keywords

    • Delayed greening
    • Seedling herbivory
    • Seedlings
    • Tropical forest
    • Young leaf colour

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