Published April 27, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data From: Respiratory temperature responses of tropical conifers differ with leaf morphology

  • 1. Columbia University
  • 2. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
  • 3. New York Botanical Garden
  • 4. Macalester College
  • 5. Bidoup Nui Ba National Park*
  • 6. Forest Science Institute of Central Highlands and South of Central Vietnam*

Description

Photosynthetic traits suggest that shade tolerance may explain the contrasting success of two conifer taxa, Podocarpaceae and Pinaceae, in tropical forests. Needle-leaved species from Pinus (Pinaceae) are generally absent from tropical forests, while Pinus krempfii, a flat-leaved pine, and numerous flat-leaved Podocarpaceae are abundant. Respiration (R) traits may provide additional insight into the drivers of the contrasting success of needle- and flat-leaved conifers in tropical forests.  We measured the short-term respiratory temperature (RT) response between 10 – 50°C and foliar morphological traits of 3 needle- and 7 flat-leaved conifer species coexisting in a tropical montane forest in the Central Highlands of Vietnam containing notable conifer diversity. We fit a lognormal polynomial model to each RT curve and extracted the following three parameters: a (basal R), and b and c (together describing the shape of the response).  Needle-leaved species (Pinus kesiya, Pinus dalatensis and Dacrydium elatum) had higher rates of area-based R at 25°C (R25-area) as well as higher area-based modeled basal respiration (a) than flat-leaved species (P. krempfii, Podocarpus neriifolius, Dacrycarpus imbricatus, Nageia nana, Taxus wallichiana, Keteeleria evelyniana and Fokienia hodginsii).  No significant differences were found between needle- and flat-leaved species in mass-based R25 (R25-mass) or in the shape of the RT response (b and c); however, interspecific differences in R25-mass, R at nighttime temperature extremes (R4.1 & R20.6) and leaf traits were apparent.  Differences in R25-area and a suggest that needle-leaved foliage may be more energetically costly to maintain than flat-leaved foliage, providing new insight and additional support for the hypothesis that shade tolerance is an important driver of Podocarpaceae success and Pinaceae absence in the majority of tropical forests.  Interspecific differences in R25-mass and leaf traits highlight that varying ecological strategies are employed by conifers to coexist and survive in the Central Highlands of Vietnam. Ultimately, these data further our understanding of current conifer biogeographic distributions and underscore the need for additional studies to elucidate the effects of extreme temperature events on the continued survival of conifers in this unique forest.

Notes

ReadMe File includes column names, descriptions and units for each dataset.  Missing data, or data removed due to measurement error are denoted by "NA".

SSchmiege_master_results_Vietnam_RT.csv
All foliar traits included in the analysis.

SSchmiege_Vietnam_RTcurves_raw.csv
Output of the raw LI-6400XT respiration temperature response curves.

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: DGE-1644869

Funding provided by: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Climate Center*
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number:

Funding provided by: Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University*
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: Ashton Award

Funding provided by: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Climate Center
Crossref Funder Registry ID:

Funding provided by: Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: Ashton Award

Files

README_SSchmiege_Vietnam_Functional_Ecology.txt

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