Does the leaf economic spectrum hold within plant functional types? A Bayesian multivariate trait meta-analysis.

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ID: 73497
2019
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Abstract
The leaf economic spectrum is a widely-studied axis of plant trait variability that defines a trade-off between leaf longevity and productivity. While this has been investigated at the global scale, where it is robust, and at local scales, where deviations from it are common, it has received less attention at the intermediate scale of PFTs. We investigated whether global leaf economic relationships are also present within the scale of plant functional types (PFTs) commonly used by Earth System models, and the extent to which this global-PFT hierarchy can be used to constrain trait estimates. We developed a hierarchical multivariate Bayesian model that assumes separate means and covariance structures within and across PFTs and fit this model to seven leaf traits from the TRY database related to leaf longevity, morphology, biochemistry, and photosynthetic metabolism. Although patterns of trait covariation were generally consistent with the leaf economic spectrum, we found three approximate tiers to this consistency. Relationships among morphological and biochemical traits (SLA, N, P) were the most robust within and across PFTs, suggesting that covariation in these traits is driven by universal leaf construction trade-offs and stoichiometry. Relationships among metabolic traits (Rd, Vc,max, Jmax) were slightly less consistent, reflecting in part their much sparser sampling (especially for high-latitude PFTs), but also pointing to more flexible plasticity in plant metabolistm. Finally, relationships involving leaf lifespan were the least consistent, indicating that leaf economic relationships related to leaf lifespan are dominated by across-PFT differences and that within-PFT variation in leaf lifespan is more complex and idiosyncratic. Across all traits, these covariance were an important source of information, as evidenced by the improved imputation accuracy and reduced predictive uncertainty in multivariate models compared to univariate models. Ultimately, our study reaffirms the value of studying not just individual traits but the multivariate trait space and the utility of hierarchical modeling for studying the scale dependence of trait relationships.
Reference Key
shiklomanov2019doesecological Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Shiklomanov, Alexey N;Cowdery, Elizabeth M;Bahn, Michael;Byun, Chaeho;Jansen, Steven;Kramer, Koen;Minden, Vanessa;Niinemets, Ülo;Onoda, Yusuke;Soudzilovskaia, Nadejda A;Dietze, Michael C;
Journal ecological applications : a publication of the ecological society of america
Year 2019
DOI
10.1002/eap.2064
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