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      Seedlings of temperate rainforest conifer and angiosperm trees differ in leaf area display

      Lusk, Christopher H.; Pérez-Millaqueo, Manuel Matías; Saldaña, Alfredo O.; Burns, Bruce; Laughlin, Daniel C.; Falster, Daniel S.
      DOI
       10.1093/aob/mcs095
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      Lusk, C. H., Perez-Millaqueo, M. M., Saldana, A., Burns, B. R., Laughlin, D. C., & Falster, D. S. (2012). Seedlings of temperate rainforest conifer and angiosperm trees differ in leaf area display. Annals of Botany, 110(1), 177-188.
      Permanent Research Commons link: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/7187
      Abstract
      Background and Aims The contemporary relegation of conifers mainly to cold or infertile sites has been ascribed to low competitive ability, as a result of the hydraulic inefficiency of tracheids and their seedlings initial dependence on small foliage areas. Here it is hypothesized that, in temperate rainforests, the larger leaves of angiosperms also reduce self-shading and thus enable display of larger effective foliage areas than the numerous small leaves of conifers. Methods This hypothesis was tested using 3-D modelling of plant architecture and structural equation modelling to compare self-shading and light interception potential of seedlings of six conifers and 12 angiosperm trees from temperate rainforests. The ratio of displayed leaf area to plant mass (LARd) was used to indicate plant light interception potential: LARd is the product of specific leaf area, leaf mass fraction, self-shading and leaf angle.ResultsAngiosperm seedlings self-shaded less than conifers, mainly because of differences in leaf number (more than leaf size), and on average their LARd was about twice that of conifers. Although specific leaf area was the most pervasive influence on LARd, differences in self-shading also significantly influenced LARd of large seedlings. Conclusions The ability to deploy foliage in relatively few, large leaves is advantageous in minimizing self-shading and enhancing seedling light interception potential per unit of plant biomass. This study adds significantly to evidence that vegetative traits may be at least as important as reproductive innovations in explaining the success of angiosperms in productive environments where vegetation is structured by light competition.
      Date
      2012
      Type
      Journal Article
      Publisher
      Oxford University Press
      Collections
      • Science and Engineering Papers [3124]
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