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(American Journal of Botany. 2007;94:901-911.)
© 2007 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Ecology

Seed size, seedling morphology, and response to deep shade and damage in neotropical rain forest trees1

Christopher Baraloto and Pierre-Michel Forget

Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR "Écologie des Forêts de Guyane," Kourou, French Guiana; Département Ecologie et Gestion de la Biodiversité, UMR 7179 CNRS-MNHN, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Brunoy, France

ABSTRACT

To investigate the existence of coordinated sets of seedling traits adapted to contrasting establishment conditions, we examined evolutionary convergence in seedling traits for 299 French Guianan woody plant species and the stress response in a shadehouse of species representing seed size gradients within five major cotyledon morphology types. The French Guianan woody plant community has larger seeds than other tropical forest communities and the largest proportion of hypogeal cotyledon type (59.2%) reported for tropical forests. Yet the community includes many species with intermediate size seeds that produce seedlings with different cotyledonal morphologies. A split-plot factorial design with two light levels (0.8% and 16.1% PAR) and four damage treatments (control, seed damage, leaf damage, stem damage) was used in the shadehouse experiment. Although larger-seeded species had higher survival and slower growth, these patterns were better explained by cotyledon type than by seed mass. Even larger-seeded species with foliar cotyledons grew faster than species with reserve-type cotyledons, and survival after stem grazing was five times higher in seedlings with hypogeal cotyledons than with epigeal cotyledons. Thus, to predict seedling performance using seed size, seedling morphology must also be considered.

Key Words: cotyledons • French Guiana • functional morphology • herbivory • life history • phylogeny • regeneration strategy • shade tolerance







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