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Abstract
Leaf mass per area (LMA) is one of the most widely measured of all plant functional
traits. In deciduous forests, there is similarity between plastic and evolutionary
responses of LMA to light gradients. In evergreens, however, LMA is lower in shaded
than sunlit individuals of the same species, whereas shade-tolerant evergreens have
higher LMA than light-demanders grown under the same conditions. We suggest that this
pattern of 'counter-gradient variation' results from some combination of (i) close
evolutionary coordination of LMA with leaf lifespan, (ii) selection for different
leaf constitutions (relative investment in cell walls versus cell contents) in sun
and shade environments and/or (iii) constraints on plasticity as a result of genetic
correlations between phenotypes expressed in sun and shade.