Yoshiko Iida
Hokkaido University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yoshiko Iida.
Global Change Biology | 2017
Tommaso Jucker; John P. Caspersen; Jérôme Chave; Cécile Antin; Nicolas Barbier; Frans Bongers; Michele Dalponte; Karin Y. van Ewijk; David I. Forrester; Matthias Haeni; Steven I. Higgins; Robert J. Holdaway; Yoshiko Iida; Craig G. Lorimer; Peter L. Marshall; Stéphane Momo; Glenn R. Moncrieff; Pierre Ploton; Lourens Poorter; Kassim Abd Rahman; Michael Schlund; Bonaventure Sonké; Frank J. Sterck; Anna T. Trugman; Vladimir Usoltsev; Mark C. Vanderwel; Peter Waldner; Beatrice Wedeux; Christian Wirth; Hannsjörg Wöll
Abstract Remote sensing is revolutionizing the way we study forests, and recent technological advances mean we are now able – for the first time – to identify and measure the crown dimensions of individual trees from airborne imagery. Yet to make full use of these data for quantifying forest carbon stocks and dynamics, a new generation of allometric tools which have tree height and crown size at their centre are needed. Here, we compile a global database of 108753 trees for which stem diameter, height and crown diameter have all been measured, including 2395 trees harvested to measure aboveground biomass. Using this database, we develop general allometric models for estimating both the diameter and aboveground biomass of trees from attributes which can be remotely sensed – specifically height and crown diameter. We show that tree height and crown diameter jointly quantify the aboveground biomass of individual trees and find that a single equation predicts stem diameter from these two variables across the worlds forests. These new allometric models provide an intuitive way of integrating remote sensing imagery into large‐scale forest monitoring programmes and will be of key importance for parameterizing the next generation of dynamic vegetation models.
Journal of Ecology | 2014
Yoshiko Iida; Takashi Kohyama; Nathan G. Swenson; Sheng-Hsin Su; Chien-Teh Chen; Jyh-Min Chiang; I-Fang Sun
Summary An important goal in plant community ecology is to understand how species traits determine demographic performance. Several functional traits have been shown to correlate with growth and mortality rates in trees, but less is known about how the relationships between functional traits and demographic rates change with tree size. We examined the associations of functional traits with growth and mortality across 43 tree species in the Fushan 25-ha subtropical rain forest plot in northern Taiwan. We estimated the 95th percentile maximum stem diameter, wood density and six leaf functional traits (leaf area, specific leaf area, thickness, succulence, and mass-based nitrogen and phosphorus contents) obtained from leaves on juvenile and adult individuals of each species. To quantify size-dependent changes in growth and mortality, relative growth rate (RGR) and mortality were estimated as a function of stem diameter using hierarchical Bayesian models. These rate estimates were then correlated with functional traits at a range of stem diameter classes. Relationships between functional traits and demographic rates varied with tree size. Maximum size was positively correlated with RGR across a wide range of tree sizes. Wood density was negatively correlated with RGR and mortality for small-sized trees. Leaf traits such as leaf area and specific leaf area at juvenile and adult stages were associated more strongly with demographic rates for corresponding sizes than from other sizes. Synthesis. The observed size-dependent changes in the trait–demography relationships are possibly due to the effects of developmental and environmental changes with increasing tree size. The underlying effects of functional traits on demographic performance vary with tree size, and this should influence dynamics in a tree community.
Ecology | 2014
Yoshiko Iida; Lourens Poorter; Frank J. Sterck; Abd Rahman Kassim; Matthew D. Potts; Takuya Kubo; Takashi Kohyama
Tree architecture, growth, and mortality change with increasing tree size and associated light conditions. To date, few studies have quantified how size-dependent changes in growth and mortality rates co-vary with architectural traits, and how such size-dependent changes differ across species and possible light capture strategies. We applied a hierarchical Bayesian model to quantify size-dependent changes in demographic rates and correlated demographic rates and architectural traits for 145 co-occurring Malaysian rain-forest tree species covering a wide range of tree sizes. Demographic rates were estimated using relative growth rate in stem diameter (RGR) and mortality rate as a function of stem diameter. Architectural traits examined were adult stature measured as the 95-percentile of the maximum stem diameter (upper diameter), wood density, and three tree architectural variables: tree height, foliage height, and crown width. Correlations between demographic rates and architectural traits were examined for stem diameters ranging from 1 to 47 cm. As a result, RGR and mortality varied significantly with increasing stem diameter across species. At smaller stem diameters, RGR was higher for tall trees with wide crowns, large upper diameter, and low wood density. Increased mortality was associated with low wood density at small diameters, and associated with small upper diameter and wide crowns over a wide range of stem diameters. Positive correlations between RGR and mortality were found over the whole range of stem diameters, but they were significant only at small stem diameters. Associations between architectural traits and demographic rates were strongest at small stem diameters. In the dark understory of tropical rain forests, the limiting amount of light is likely to make the interspecific difference in the effects of functional traits on demography more clear. Demographic performance is therefore tightly linked with architectural traits such as adult stature, wood density, and capacity for horizontal crown expansion. The enhancement of a demographic trade-off due to interspecific variation in functional traits in the understory helps to explain species coexistence in diverse rain forests.
Journal of Ecology | 2017
Jenny Zambrano; Yoshiko Iida; Robert W. Howe; Luxiang Lin; María Natalia Umaña; Amy Wolf; Samantha J. Worthy; Nathan G. Swenson
The structure and dynamics of ecological communities are ultimately the outcome of the differential demographic rates of individuals. Individual growth and mortality rates largely result from the interaction between an organisms phenotype and the abiotic and biotic environment. Functional traits have been used extensively over the past decade to elucidate links among phenotypes, demography and community dynamics.
Ecology and Evolution | 2016
Yoshiko Iida; I-Fang Sun; Charles A. Price; Chien-Teh Chen; Zueng-Sang Chen; Jyh-Min Chiang; Chun-Lin Huang; Nathan G. Swenson
Abstract A fundamental goal in ecology is to link variation in species function to performance, but functional trait–performance investigations have had mixed success. This indicates that less commonly measured functional traits may more clearly elucidate trait–performance relationships. Despite the potential importance of leaf vein traits, which are expected to be related to resource delivery rates and photosynthetic capacity, there are few studies, which examine associations between these traits and demographic performance in communities. Here, we examined the associations between species traits including leaf venation traits and demographic rates (Relative Growth Rate, RGR and mortality) as well as the spatial distributions of traits along soil environment for 54 co‐occurring species in a subtropical forest. Size‐related changes in demographic rates were estimated using a hierarchical Bayesian approach. Next, Kendalls rank correlations were quantified between traits and estimated demographic rates at a given size and between traits and species‐average soil environment. Species with denser venation, smaller areoles, less succulent, or thinner leaves showed higher RGR for a wide range of size classes. Species with leaves of denser veins, larger area, cheaper construction costs or thinner, or low‐density wood were associated with high mortality rates only in small size classes. Lastly, contrary to our expectations, acquisitive traits were not related to resource‐rich edaphic conditions. This study shows that leaf vein traits are weakly, but significantly related to tree demographic performance together with other species traits. Because leaf traits associated with an acquisitive strategy such as denser venation, less succulence, and thinner leaves showed higher growth rate, but similar leaf traits were not associated with mortality, different pathways may shape species growth and survival. This study suggests that we are still not measuring some of key traits related to resource‐use strategies, which dictate the demography and distributions of species.
Nature Communications | 2017
Nathan G. Swenson; Yoshiko Iida; Robert W. Howe; Amy Wolf; María Natalia Umaña; Krittika Petprakob; Benjamin L. Turner; Keping Ma
The distribution and co-occurrence of species are partly the outcome of their interactions with environmental drivers. Drought is a key driver related to the distribution of plant species. Drought events continue to increase in frequency and severity and identifying those aspects of plant function that are related to drought is critical. Here, we perform a community-level analysis of gene expression in relation to experimental drought and relate the similarity in gene set enrichment across species to their natural co-occurrence. Species with similar gene set enrichment in response to experimental drought tend to non-randomly co-occur in a natural stand. We demonstrate that similarity in the transcriptomic response of species to drought is a significantly better indicator of natural co-occurrence than measures of functional trait similarity and phylogenetic relatedness and that transcriptomics has the capacity to greatly enhance ecological investigations of species distributions and community structure.Drought has a major influence on plant distribution. Here, Swenson et al. show that a similar gene expression response to experimental drought outperforms traditional functional traits and phylogenetic relatedness as a predictor of co-occurrence of tree species in a natural stand.
Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2012
Lindsay Banin; Ted R. Feldpausch; Oliver L. Phillips; Timothy R. Baker; J. Lloyd; Kofi Affum-Baffoe; E.J.M.M. Arets; Nicholas J. Berry; M. Bradford; Roel J. W. Brienen; Stuart J. Davies; Michael Drescher; Niro Higuchi; David W. Hilbert; A. Hladik; Yoshiko Iida; K. Abu Salim; Abd Rahman Kassim; D.A. King; Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez; Daniel J. Metcalfe; Reuben Nilus; Kelvin S.-H. Peh; Jan Reitsma; Bonaventure Sonké; Hermann Taedoumg; Sylvester Tan; Lee White; Hannsjörg Wöll; Simon L. Lewis
Functional Ecology | 2012
Yoshiko Iida; Lourens Poorter; Frank J. Sterck; Abd Rahman Kassim; Takuya Kubo; Matthew D. Potts; Takashi Kohyama
Functional Ecology | 2011
Yoshiko Iida; Takashi Kohyama; Takuya Kubo; Abd Rahman Kassim; Lourens Poorter; Frank J. Sterck; Matthew D. Potts
Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2017
María Natalia Umaña; Xiangcheng Mi; Min Cao; Brian J. Enquist; Zhanqing Hao; Robert W. Howe; Yoshiko Iida; Daniel K. N. Johnson; Luxiang Lin; Xiaojuan Liu; Keping Ma; I-Fang Sun; Jill Thompson; María Uriarte; Xugao Wang; Amy Wolf; Jie Yang; Jess K. Zimmerman; Nathan G. Swenson