Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027, USA.
Ecology. 2012 Jan;93(1):191-205. doi: 10.1890/10-2422.1.
Species employ diverse strategies to cope with natural disturbance, but the importance of these strategies for maintaining tree species diversity in forests has been debated. Mechanisms that have the potential to promote tree species coexistence in the context of repeated disturbance include life history trade-offs in colonization and competitive ability or in species' ability to survive at low resource conditions and exploit the temporary resource-rich conditions often generated in the wake of disturbance (successional niche). Quantifying these trade-offs requires long-term forest monitoring and modeling. We developed a hierarchical Bayes model to investigate the strategies tree species employ to withstand and recover from hurricane disturbance and the life history trade-offs that may facilitate species coexistence in forests subject to repeated hurricane disturbance. Unlike previous approaches, our model accommodates temporal variation in process error and observations from multiple sources. We parameterized the model using growth and mortality data from four censuses of a 16-ha plot taken every five years (1990-2005), together with damage data collected after two hurricanes and annual seed production data (1992-2005). Species' susceptibilities to hurricane damage as reflected by changes in diameter growth and fecundity immediately following a storm were weak, highly variable, and unpredictable using traditional life history groupings. The lower crowding conditions (e.g., high light) generated in the wake of storms, however, led to greater gains in growth and fecundity for pioneer and secondary-forest species than for shade-tolerant species, in accordance with expectation of life history. We found moderate trade-offs between survival in high crowding conditions, a metric of competitive ability, and long-distance colonization. We also uncovered a strong trade-off between mean species fecundity in low crowding conditions, a metric of recovery potential, and competitive ability. Trade-offs in competitive and colonization ability, in addition to successional niche processes, are likely to contribute to species persistence in these hurricane-impacted forests. The strategies species employ to cope with hurricane damage depend on the degree to which species rely on sprouting, repair of adult damage, changes in demographic rates in response to enhanced resource availability after storms, or long-distance dispersal as recovery mechanisms.
物种采用多种策略来应对自然干扰,但这些策略对于维持森林中树种多样性的重要性一直存在争议。在反复干扰的情况下,有可能促进树种共存的机制包括在定居和竞争力方面的生活史权衡,或者物种在资源匮乏条件下生存和利用经常在干扰后产生的暂时资源丰富条件(演替生态位)的能力。量化这些权衡需要长期的森林监测和建模。我们开发了一个层次贝叶斯模型,以研究树种在抵御和从飓风干扰中恢复的策略,以及可能促进在反复受到飓风干扰的森林中物种共存的生活史权衡。与以前的方法不同,我们的模型可以适应过程误差和来自多个来源的观测值的时间变化。我们使用每隔五年进行一次的 16 公顷样地的四次清查中的生长和死亡率数据(1990-2005 年)以及两次飓风后收集的损害数据和 1992-2005 年的年度种子生产数据来参数化模型。物种对飓风损害的敏感性反映在风暴后直径生长和繁殖力的变化上,这是微弱的、高度可变的,并且使用传统的生活史分组是不可预测的。然而,风暴过后的低拥挤条件(例如高光)导致先锋种和次生林种的生长和繁殖力比耐荫种有更大的提高,这符合生活史的预期。我们发现,在高拥挤条件下生存(竞争力的一个指标)与长距离定居之间存在适度的权衡。我们还发现,在低拥挤条件下,物种的平均繁殖力(恢复潜力的一个指标)与竞争力之间存在很强的权衡。除了演替生态位过程之外,竞争力和定居能力的权衡可能有助于这些受飓风影响的森林中物种的持续存在。物种应对飓风破坏的策略取决于物种依赖萌芽、修复成年损害、在风暴后资源增加时改变人口增长率还是远距离扩散作为恢复机制的程度。