Wind speed and soil properties drive the height-diameter allometric pattern of island plants
Chengfeng Yang, Renfu Liao, Shengzhuo Huang, Yikang Cheng, Shurong Zhou

TL;DR
This study shows that wind speed and soil properties are key factors shaping how island plants grow in height and thickness.
Contribution
The study identifies wind speed and soil properties as primary drivers of plant allometry in island ecosystems.
Findings
Wind speed significantly influences the height-diameter allometric exponent of island plants.
Soil properties mainly affect the allometric intercept, indicating their role in baseline growth conditions.
Temperature and precipitation have weaker effects due to tropical climate buffering.
Abstract
Island ecosystems, due to their geographical isolation and unique environmental conditions, often serve as natural laboratories for ecological research and are also sensitive to global climate change and biodiversity loss. The allometric relationship between plant height-diameter reflects the adaptive growth strategy of plants under different environmental conditions, particularly in response to biomechanical constraints (e.g., wind resistance) and resource availability. This study aims to explore the key driving factors of the height-diameter allometry of island plants, focusing on how island area, soil properties, and climatic factors (e.g., wind speed, temperature, and precipitation) affect plant growth strategy. We analyzed plant data from 20 tropical islands, using SMA regression to calculate the allometric exponent and intercept for each island’s plants, and evaluated the effects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTree Root and Stability Studies · Forest ecology and management · Agroforestry and silvopastoral systems
