Architecture of 54 moist-forest tree species: traits, trade-offs, and functional groups.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Frans Bongers | Lourens Poorter | F. Bongers | L. Poorter | L. Bongers | Laurent Bongers | L.J.G.M. Bongers
[1] M. Westoby,et al. Alternative height strategies among 45 dicot rain forest species from tropical Queensland, Australia , 2005 .
[2] D. Ackerly,et al. Self-shading, Carbon Gain and Leaf Dynamics: a Test of Alternative Optimality Models , 1998 .
[3] H. S. Horn. The adaptive geometry of trees , 1971 .
[4] Thomas J. Givnish,et al. Adaptation to Sun and Shade: a Whole-Plant Perspective , 1988 .
[5] Toshihiko Yamada,et al. Tree species differentiation in growth, recruitment and allometry in relation to maximum height in a Bornean mixed dipterocarp forest , 2003 .
[6] S. Thomas. Relative size at onset of maturity in rain forest trees : a comparative analysis of 37 Malaysian species , 1996 .
[7] David B. Clark,et al. LIFE HISTORY DIVERSITY OF CANOPY AND EMERGENT TREES IN A NEOTROPICAL RAIN FOREST , 1992 .
[8] T. Kohyama,et al. Significance of allometry in tropical saplings. , 1990 .
[9] Stuart J. Davies,et al. Comparative ecology of 11 sympatric species of Macaranga in Borneo: tree distribution in relation to horizontal and vertical resource heterogeneity , 1998 .
[10] F. Schieving,et al. Performance of trees in forest canopies: explorations with a bottom-up functional-structural plant growth model. , 2005, The New phytologist.
[11] L. Sack,et al. Why do species of woody seedlings change rank in relative growth rate between low and high irradiance , 2001 .
[12] D. Coomes,et al. A comparison of 12 tree species of Amazonian caatinga using growth rates in gaps and understorey, and allometric relationships , 1998 .
[13] P. Reich,et al. Leaf Life‐Span in Relation to Leaf, Plant, and Stand Characteristics among Diverse Ecosystems , 1992 .
[14] P. Ashton,et al. Phenology and fecundity in 11 sympatric pioneer species of Macaranga (Euphorbiaceae)in Borneo. , 1999, American journal of botany.
[15] H. Steege. Long-term changes in tropical tree diversity : studies from the Guiana Shield, Africa, Borneo and Melanesia , 2003 .
[16] T. Kohyama,et al. CROWN ARCHITECTURE AND LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS OF 14 TREE SPECIES IN A WARM-TEMPERATE RAIN FOREST : SIGNIFICANCE OF SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY , 1997 .
[17] L Poorter,et al. Light environment, sapling architecture, and leaf display in six rain forest tree species. , 1999, American journal of botany.
[18] Fernando Valladares,et al. Convergence in light capture efficiencies among tropical forest understory plants with contrasting crown architectures: a case of morphological compensation. , 2002, American journal of botany.
[19] M. Donoghue,et al. Leaf Size, Sapling Allometry, and Corner's Rules: Phylogeny and Correlated Evolution in Maples (Acer) , 1998, The American Naturalist.
[20] D. A. King,et al. Tree architecture in relation to leaf dimensions and tree stature in temperate and tropical rain forests , 1999 .
[21] D. A. King. Influence of leaf size on tree architecture: first branch height and crown dimensions in tropical rain forest trees , 1998, Trees.
[22] F. Bongers,et al. Crown development in tropical rain forest trees: patterns with tree height and light availability , 2001 .
[23] S. Thomas. Asymptotic height as a predictor of growth and allometric characteristics in malaysian rain forest trees , 1996 .
[24] C. Lusk. Leaf area and growth of juvenile temperate evergreens in low light: species of contrasting shade tolerance change rank during ontogeny , 2004 .
[25] Mark Westoby,et al. A leaf-height-seed (LHS) plant ecology strategy scheme , 1998, Plant and Soil.
[26] C. Loehle. Strategy Space and the Disturbance Spectrum: A Life‐History Model for Tree Species Coexistence , 2000, The American Naturalist.
[27] F. Bongers,et al. ARCHITECTURE OF 53 RAIN FOREST TREE SPECIES DIFFERING IN ADULT STATURE AND SHADE TOLERANCE , 2003 .
[28] The Ecology of Trees in the Tropical Rain Forest , 2001 .
[29] N. Chiariello. Leaf Energy Balance in the Wet Lowland Tropics , 1984 .
[30] F. Bongers,et al. Beyond the regeneration phase: differentiation of height–light trajectories among tropical tree species , 2005 .
[31] M. Westoby,et al. C O M M U N I T Y E C O L O G Y , 2022 .
[32] F. Bazzaz,et al. ASYMPTOTIC HEIGHT AS A PREDICTOR OF PHOTOSYNTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS IN MALAYSIAN RAIN FOREST TREES , 1999 .
[33] S. Hubbell,et al. Spatial and temporal variation of biomass in a tropical forest: results from a large census plot in Panama , 2003 .
[34] David King,et al. Tree dimensions: Maximizing the rate of height growth in dense stands , 2004, Oecologia.
[35] D. Lieberman,et al. Growth rates and age-size relationships of tropical wet forest trees in Costa Rica , 1985, Journal of Tropical Ecology.
[36] Miguel Martínez-Ramos,et al. The consequences of crown traits for the growth and survival of tree saplings in a Mexican lowland rainforest , 2003 .
[37] D. A. King,et al. Allometry and life history of tropical trees , 1996, Journal of Tropical Ecology.
[38] Karl J. Niklas,et al. Botanical Scaling. (Book Reviews: Plant Allometry. The Scaling of Form and Process.) , 1994 .
[39] Stem allometry in a North Queensland tropical rainforest , 1995 .
[40] D. A. King,et al. Influence of light level on the growth and morphology of saplings in a panamanian forest , 1994 .
[41] S. Thomas. Reproductive allometry in Malaysian rain forest trees: Biomechanics versus optimal allocation , 1996, Evolutionary Ecology.
[42] K. Yoda. THREE-DIMENSIONAL DISTRIBUTION OF LIGHT INTENSITY IN A TROPICAL RAIN FOREST OF WEST MALAYSIA , 1974 .
[43] L. Kammesheidt. Some autecological characteristics of early to late successional tree species in Venezuela. , 2000 .
[44] T. Kohyama,et al. Size-structured tree populations in gap-dynamic forest-the forest architecture hypothesis for the stable coexistence of species , 1993 .
[45] T. Givnish. Leaf and Canopy Adaptations in Tropical Forests , 1984 .