| Literature DB >> 29604213 |
Tristan Charles-Dominique1, Guy F Midgley2, Kyle W Tomlinson1, William J Bond3,4.
Abstract
Shade cast by trees, which suppresses grass growth, and fire fuelled by grass biomass, which prevents tree sapling establishment, are mutually exclusive and self-reinforcing drivers of biome distribution in savanna-forest mosaics. We investigated how shade depth, represented by canopy leaf area index (LAI), is generated by adult trees across savanna-forest boundaries and how a shade gradient filters tree functioning, and grass composition and biomass. Forest trees exerted greater shading through increased stem density and greater light interception per unit biomass. A critical transition at LAI c. 1.5 was linked to tree shifts from savanna to forest species, functional shifts from fire-tolerant to light-competitive species, and grass composition shifts from C4 to C3 pathways. A second transition to grass fuel loads too low to support fires, occurred at a lower canopy density (LAI > 0.5), accompanied by shifts in C4 subtype dominance. This pattern suggests that shade suppression of grass biomass is an essential first step for the maintenance of alternative stable states.Entities:
Keywords: branch mass per area; ecological threshold; fire ecology; functional traits; grassland-forest mosaics; photosynthetic pathway; savanna; shade tolerance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29604213 DOI: 10.1111/nph.15117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151