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-List Of Titles -Plant ecological strategies : some leading dimensions of variation between species

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/103155

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Title
Plant ecological strategies : some leading dimensions of variation between species
Related
Annual review of ecology and systematics, Vol. 33, (2002), p.125-159
DOI
10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.33.010802.150452
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Date
2002
Author/Creator
Westoby, Mark
Author/Creator
Falster, Daniel S
Author/Creator
Moles, Angela T
Author/Creator
Vesk, Peter A
Author/Creator
Wright, Ian J
Description
An important aim of plant ecology is to identify leading dimensions of ecological variation among species and to understand the basis for them. Dimensions that can readily be measured would be especially useful, because they might offer a path towards improved worldwide synthesis across the thousands of field experiments and ecophysiological studies that use just a few species each. Four dimensions are reviewed here. The leaf mass per area–leaf lifespan (LMA-LL) dimension expresses slow turnover of plant parts (at high LMA and long LL), long nutrient residence times, and slow response to favorable growth conditions. The seed mass–seed output (SM-SO) dimension is an important predictor of dispersal to establishment opportunities (seed output) and of establishment success in the face of hazards (seed mass). The LMA-LL and SM-SO dimensions are each underpinned by a single, comprehensible tradeoff, and their consequences are fairly well understood. The leaf size–twig size (LS-TS) spectrum has obvious consequences for the texture of canopies, but the costs and benefits of large versus small leaf and twig size are poorly understood. The height dimension has universally been seen as ecologically important and included in ecological strategy schemes. Nevertheless, height includes several tradeoffs and adaptive elements, which ideally should be treated separately. Each of these four dimensions varies at the scales of climate zones and of site types within landscapes. This variation can be interpreted as adaptation to the physical environment. Each dimension also varies widely among coexisting species. Most likely this within-site variation arises because the ecological opportunities for each species depend strongly on which other species are present, in other words, because the set of species at a site is a stable mixture of strategies.
Description
35 page(s)
Subject Keyword
seed mass
Subject Keyword
leaf mass per area
Subject Keyword
foliage height
Subject Keyword
leaf size
Subject Keyword
leaf lifespan
Subject Keyword
twig size
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Biological Sciences

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/103155
Identifier
ISSN:0066-4162
Identifier
mq-rm-2002015769
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Annual review of ecology and systematics"
 
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