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Flow similarity model predicts allometric size dependence, curvature and covariation of 285 North American tree species
  • Charles Price,
  • Todd Schroeder
Charles Price
University of Tennessee

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Todd Schroeder
USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station
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Abstract

Biologists have long been interested in whether different species share similar patterns of growth. Using 8,794,737 measurements for 285 species from the U.S. Forest Inventory and Analysis database, we test several predictions emerging from a recently published model for plant growth and allometry. We show that the model’s predicted curvature for intraspecific relationships between height, DBH and biomass is found in 88.1% of examined cases, and empirical slopes fall as predicted between the elastic similarity and flow similarity predictions in 71.1% of cases. We also find a strong size dependence in observed intraspecific allometric exponents, with large species, particularly gymnosperms, converging near the expectation for elastic similarity, and the central tendency among small species approaching the expectations for flow similarity in most cases. Our results support the idea that differences in growth patterns across plant species depend on plant size and their attendant hydraulic and/or biomechanical demands.