Litcius/Paper detail

Seasonal variation of leaf thickness: An overlooked component of functional trait variability

Sylvain Schmitt, Santiago Trueba, Sabrina Coste, Émilie Ducouret, Niklas Tysklind, Myriam Heuertz, Damien Bonal, Benoît Burban, Bruno Hérault, Géraldine Derroire

2022Plant Biology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The dry and wet seasons in the Neotropics have strong effects on soil water and nutrient availability, as well as on forest dynamics. Despite these major effects on forest ecology, little is known on how leaf traits vary throughout the seasons in tropical rainforest trees. Here, we investigated the influence of seasonal variations in climate and soil characteristics on leaf trait variation in two tropical tree species. We measured two leaf traits, thickness and water mass per area, in 401 individuals of two species of Symphonia (Clusiaceae) in the Paracou research station in French Guiana tropical lowland rainforest. We found a significant effect of seasonal variation on these two leaf traits. Soil relative extractable water was a strong environmental predictor of leaf trait variation in response to seasonal variation. Reduced soil water availability during the dry season was associated with increased leaf thickness and water mass per area, possibly as a result of stomatal closure. Our findings advocate the need to account for environmental seasonality when studying leaf traits in seasonal ecosystems such as tropical forests.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySeasonalityRainforestTraitEcosystemEcologyDry seasonSpecific leaf areaTropical rainforestTropicsTropical forestTropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forestsTropical savanna climateWet seasonPrecipitationAgronomyBotanyPhotosynthesisGeographyMeteorologyProgramming languageComputer scienceEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesLeaf Properties and Growth MeasurementPlant and animal studies