Table 1.
Tree species used in the study, their functional groups and high-order trait characteristics.
Table 2.
Traits evaluated in the current study and their hypothesized ecological relevance to tree water use.
Fig 1.
Contrasting wood anatomical features (a-h) of tropical lowland rainforest trees from Daintree, Australia.
Early successional trees (a) Alstonia scholaris and (b) Elaeocarpus angustifolius with light coloured wood and scattered vessels; mature-phase trees (c) Argyrodendron peralatum, (d) Castanospermum australe, (e) Endiandra microneura, (f) Myristica globosa, and (g) Syzygium graveolens with varying vessel and parenchyma arrangements, and; palm (h) Normanbya normanbyi with dark fiber bundles. The white scale bar in Syzygium equal 0.2 mm and serves for all images except for Normanbya where it equals 0.25mm.
Fig 2.
Means (±S.E) of sap flow measures and annual basal area increment of tropical lowland rainforest tree species from Daintree, Australia.
Species codes are as follows for early successional (yellow bars), mature-phase (blue bars) and palm species (maroon bars): Alstonia scholaris (ALS); Elaeocarpus angustifolius (ELA); Argyrodendron peralatum (ARG); Castanospermum australe (CAS); Endiandra microneura (END); Myristica globosa (MYR); Syzygium graveolens (SYZ); Normanbya normanbyi (NOR). The palm species NOR was excluded from the annual basal area increment graph as it does not exhibit secondary growth comparable with the other seven eudicot trees. One-way ANOVA F-values are given and significance levels are indicated by asterisks as follows: P<0.05*, <0.01**, <0.001***. Numerator degrees of freedom and denominator error degrees of freedom are 7 and 22 respectively for sap flow measures and 6 and 19 respectively for annual basal area increment. Significant differences between species are indicated by different letters (Tukeys HSD, p < 0.05).
Fig 3.
Means (±S.E) of stem traits of tropical lowland rainforest tree species from Daintree, Australia.
Species and colour codes follows Fig 2. One-way ANOVA F-values are given and significance levels are indicated by asterisks as follows: P<0.05*, <0.01**, <0.001***. Numerator degrees of freedom and denominator error degrees of freedom are 7 and 22 respectively for all variables. Significant differences between species are indicated by different letters (Tukeys HSD, p < 0.05).
Fig 4.
Means (±S.E) of leaf traits of tropical lowland rainforest tree species from Daintree, Australia.
Species and colour codes follows Fig 2. One-way ANOVA F-values are given and significance levels are indicated by asterisks as follows: P<0.05*, <0.01**, <0.001***. Numerator degrees of freedom and denominator error degrees of freedom are 7 and 22 respectively for all variables. Significant differences between species are indicated by different letters (Tukeys HSD, p < 0.05).
Fig 5.
Non-metric multidimensional scaling ordinations of traits of tropical lowland rainforest species including (a) and excluding (b) the palm species.
Traits and their abbreviations (in parentheses) include: vessel area, vessel density, *theoretical specific conductivity, wood density, leaf dry matter content (LDMC), leaf slenderness, minimum and maximum leaf water potentials (min ΨL, max ΨL respectively), intrinsic water-use-efficiency (WUEi) and vulnerability index. Species symbols are as follows: Secondary-successional species – Alstonia scholaris (yellow circles); Elaeocarpus angustifolius (yellow inverted triangles); Mature-phase species – Argyrodendron peralatum (blue circles); Castanospermum australe (blue squares); Endiandra microneura (blue inverted triangles); Myristica globosa (blue diamonds); Syzygium graveolens (blue triangles), and; Palm – Normanbya normanbyi (maroon circles). The arrows by the axes indicate significant positive or negative Pearson correlations between individual traits and axes.
Table 3.
Pearson correlations for functional traits with two ordination axes produced by Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS).
Table 4.
Top candidate models that predict mean maximum sap velocity and mean annual basal area increment across seven tropical lowland rainforest tree species in Daintree, northeast Australia.