Tasas de crecimiento juveniles y distribucion de tres especies de nothofagus en un gradiente altitudinal

Translated title of the contribution: Juvenile height growth rates and sorting of three nothofagus species on an altitudinal gradient

C. C. Garrido, Christopher H. Lusk*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    6 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    It has been argued that if the cost of investment in cold resistance mechanisms detracts significantly from growth rates, then height growth tradeoffs should control species sorting on latitudinal temperature gradients. Applying the same logic to altitudinal temperature gradients, it can be predicted that species' upper altitudinal limits will be fixed by their degree of cold resistance, whereas the lower altitudinal limits of species growing higher up will be set by competition from faster-growing thermophilous species. We tested this prediction for three Nothofagus species on an altitudinal gradient (1,100 - 1,700 m) near Termas de Chilián, on the lower western slopes of the Andean Cordillera. We used retrospective methods to measure height increment during the previous growing season, for juvenile trees growing under open conditions at 12 sites. As expected, height growth rates generally decreased with increasing altitude. However, relationships between altitude and height growth did not differ among species. As growth rates of cold-resistant N. pumilio were very similar to those of its more thermophilous competitors N. obliqua and N. dombeyi, our initial prediction was not upheld by the data, and we can not explain what determines the lower altitudinal limit of M pumilio.

    Translated title of the contributionJuvenile height growth rates and sorting of three nothofagus species on an altitudinal gradient
    Original languageSpanish
    Pages (from-to)21-25
    Number of pages5
    JournalGayana Botanica
    Volume59
    Issue number1
    Publication statusPublished - 2002

    Keywords

    • Altitude
    • Cold resistence
    • Competition
    • Temperate forest
    • Tradeoff

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