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The interspecific growth-mortality trade-off is not a general framework for tropical forest community structure.

Sabrina E RussoSean M McMahonMatteo DettoGlenn LedderS Joseph WrightRichard S ConditStuart J DaviesPeter S AshtonSarayudh BunyavejchewinChia-Hao Chang-YangSisira EdiriweeraCorneille E N EwangoChristine FletcherRobin B FosterC V Savi GunatillekeI A U Nimal GunatillekeTerese HartChang-Fu HsiehStephen P HubbellAkira ItohAbdul Rahman KassimYao Tze LeongYi Ching LinJean-Remy MakanaMohizah Bt MohamadPerry S OngAnna SugiyamaI Fang SunSylvester TanJill ThompsonTakuo YamakuraSandra L YapJess K Zimmerman
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2020)
Resource allocation within trees is a zero-sum game. Unavoidable trade-offs dictate that allocation to growth-promoting functions curtails other functions, generating a gradient of investment in growth versus survival along which tree species align, known as the interspecific growth-mortality trade-off. This paradigm is widely accepted but not well established. Using demographic data for 1,111 tree species across ten tropical forests, we tested the generality of the growth-mortality trade-off and evaluated its underlying drivers using two species-specific parameters describing resource allocation strategies: tolerance of resource limitation and responsiveness of allocation to resource access. Globally, a canonical growth-mortality trade-off emerged, but the trade-off was strongly observed only in less disturbance-prone forests, which contained diverse resource allocation strategies. Only half of disturbance-prone forests, which lacked tolerant species, exhibited the trade-off. Supported by a theoretical model, our findings raise questions about whether the growth-mortality trade-off is a universally applicable organizing framework for understanding tropical forest community structure.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • cardiovascular events
  • risk factors
  • cardiovascular disease
  • coronary artery disease
  • machine learning
  • deep learning