School of Environmental and Forest Science, University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA.
Front Plant Sci. 2014 Jun 17;5:275. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00275. eCollection 2014.
In this review, structural and functional changes are described in single-species, even-aged, stands undergoing competition for light. Theories of the competition process as interactions between whole plants have been advanced but have not been successful in explaining these changes and how they vary between species or growing conditions. This task now falls to researchers in plant architecture. Research in plant architecture has defined three important functions of individual plants that determine the process of canopy development and competition: (i) resource acquisition plasticity; (ii) morphogenetic plasticity; (iii) architectural variation in efficiency of interception and utilization of light. In this review, this research is synthesized into a theory for competition based on five groups of postulates about the functioning of plants in stands. Group 1: competition for light takes place at the level of component foliage and branches. Group 2: the outcome of competition is determined by the dynamic interaction between processes that exert dominance and processes that react to suppression. Group 3: species differences may affect both exertion of dominance and reaction to suppression. Group 4: individual plants may simultaneously exhibit, in different component parts, resource acquisition and morphogenetic plasticity. Group 5: mortality is a time-delayed response to suppression. Development of architectural models when combined with field investigations is identifying research needed to develop a theory of architectural influences on the competition process. These include analyses of the integration of foliage and branch components into whole-plant growth and precise definitions of environmental control of morphogenetic plasticity and its interaction with acquisition of carbon for plant growth.
在这篇综述中,描述了单一种群、同龄林分中为争夺光资源而发生的结构和功能变化。关于竞争过程是作为整株植物之间相互作用的理论已经提出,但未能成功解释这些变化以及它们如何在物种或生长条件之间变化。现在,这项任务落在了植物结构研究人员身上。植物结构研究定义了决定冠层发育和竞争过程的个体植物的三个重要功能:(i)资源获取可塑性;(ii)形态发生可塑性;(iii)截获和利用光的效率的结构变化。在这篇综述中,将这项研究综合成一个基于五组关于植物在林分内功能的假设的竞争理论。第 1 组:光竞争发生在组成叶片和枝条的水平上。第 2 组:竞争的结果取决于发挥优势和对抑制做出反应的过程之间的动态相互作用。第 3 组:物种差异可能影响优势的发挥和对抑制的反应。第 4 组:个体植物在不同的组成部分可能同时表现出资源获取和形态发生可塑性。第 5 组:死亡率是对抑制的延迟反应。将结构模型的发展与实地调查相结合,确定了发展关于结构对竞争过程影响的理论所需的研究。这些研究包括分析叶片和枝条组成部分如何整合到整株植物的生长中,以及精确定义形态发生可塑性的环境控制及其与植物生长的碳获取的相互作用。