Chave Jérôme, Muller-Landau Helene C, Baker Timothy R, Easdale Tomás A, ter Steege Hans, Webb Campbell O
Laboratoire Evolution et Diversité Biologique, CNRS UMR 5174, Université Paul Sabatier Bâtiment 4R3, 31062 Toulouse, France.
Ecol Appl. 2006 Dec;16(6):2356-67. doi: 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2356:rapvow]2.0.co;2.
Wood density is a crucial variable in carbon accounting programs of both secondary and old-growth tropical forests. It also is the best single descriptor of wood: it correlates with numerous morphological, mechanical, physiological, and ecological properties. To explore the extent to which wood density could be estimated for rare or poorly censused taxa, and possible sources of variation in this trait, we analyzed regional, taxonomic, and phylogenetic variation in wood density among 2456 tree species from Central and South America. Wood density varied over more than one order of magnitude across species, with an overall mean of 0.645 g/cm3. Our geographical analysis showed significant decreases in wood density with increasing altitude and significant differences among low-altitude geographical regions: wet forests of Central America and western Amazonia have significantly lower mean wood density than dry forests of Central and South America, eastern and central Amazonian forests, and the Atlantic forests of Brazil; and eastern Amazonian forests have lower wood densities than the dry forests and the Atlantic forest. A nested analysis of variance showed that 74% of the species-level wood density variation was explained at the genus level, 34% at the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) family level, and 19% at the APG order level. This indicates that genus-level means give reliable approximations of values of species, except in a few hypervariable genera. We also studied which evolutionary shifts in wood density occurred in the phylogeny of seed plants using a composite phylogenetic tree. Major changes were observed at deep nodes (Eurosid 1), and also in more recent divergences (for instance in the Rhamnoids, Simaroubaceae, and Anacardiaceae). Our unprecedented wood density data set yields consistent guidelines for estimating wood densities when species-level information is lacking and should significantly reduce error in Central and South American carbon accounting programs.
木材密度是次生热带森林和原始热带森林碳核算项目中的一个关键变量。它也是木材最佳的单一描述指标:与众多形态、机械、生理和生态特性相关。为了探究对于珍稀或调查较少的分类群,木材密度能够被估计的程度,以及该性状可能的变异来源,我们分析了中美洲和南美洲2456种树木的木材密度在区域、分类学和系统发育方面的变异情况。不同物种间木材密度的变化超过一个数量级,总体平均值为0.645克/立方厘米。我们的地理分析表明,木材密度随海拔升高显著降低,且低海拔地理区域之间存在显著差异:中美洲和亚马逊西部的湿润森林的平均木材密度显著低于中美洲和南美洲的干燥森林、亚马逊东部和中部森林以及巴西的大西洋森林;亚马逊东部森林的木材密度低于干燥森林和大西洋森林。方差嵌套分析表明,74%的物种水平木材密度变异在属水平上得到解释,34%在被子植物系统发育组(APG)科级水平上得到解释,19%在APG目级水平上得到解释。这表明,除了少数高度可变的属之外,属水平的平均值能够可靠地近似物种的值。我们还利用复合系统发育树研究了种子植物系统发育中木材密度发生了哪些进化转变。在深层节点(真蔷薇类I)以及更近的分支(例如鼠李类、苦木科和漆树科)中都观察到了重大变化。我们前所未有的木材密度数据集为在缺乏物种水平信息时估计木材密度提供了一致的指导方针,并且应该能显著减少中美洲和南美洲碳核算项目中的误差。
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