COS 136-2
Conspecific and phylogenetic density dependent survival differs across life stages in a tropical forest

Friday, August 14, 2015: 8:20 AM
318, Baltimore Convention Center
Yan Zhu, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Liza S. Comita, School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, Yale University, New Haven, CT
Stephen P. Hubbell, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panamá City, Panama, University of California, Los Angeles
Keping Ma, State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Background/Question/Methods

Ecologists have long recognized that plant performance is affected by the density and composition of neighboring individuals. With the advent of highly resolved species-level phylogenies, it has become possible to test whether such neighborhood interactions are also phylogenetically dependent. Most studies of neighborhood effects have focused on a single life stage; however, the relative importance of different neighborhood interactions may shift over the lifetime of an individual. We examined effects of conspecific neighbor density, heterospecific neighbor density, and average phylogenetic relatedness of heterospecific neighbors on the survival of seedlings, saplings, juveniles and adult trees of 29 focal tree species using long-term, spatially-explicit forest dynamics data and a highly resolved DNA barcode phylogeny from the tropical forest of Barro Colorado Island (BCI), Panama.

Results/Conclusions

Our results show a decline in the strength of conspecific negative density dependence across life stages: strong negative conspecific neighbor effects at early life stages gave way to weak positive conspecific neighbor effects for adult trees. In contrast, the effect of heterospecific neighbor density on survival showed no clear trend with life stage. We found evidence of phylogenetic density dependence in the BCI forest, with a significant negative impact of neighborhood relatedness on focal tree survival, but only for later life stages. In contrast to studies from other tropical forests, neighborhood relatedness had a significant positive effect on seedling survival. Furthermore, we found that focal species varied much more widely in their sensitivity to conspecific neighbor density than in their reactions to heterospecific neighbor density or phylogenetic relatedness. Overall, our results demonstrate that both conspecific density dependence and phylogenetic density dependence influence tropical tree survival, but their relative importance varies with life stage and among species. Our study highlights the need to incorporate multiple life stages and multiple species when assessing the factors contributing to individual survival and species coexistence for long-lived organisms.