Abstract
Bonellia nervosa is an understory tree with reverse phenology in tropical dry forests (TDFs), where seasonal water and temperature stress typically shape plant phenology and trait expression. This species is heliophytic and phreatophytic, relying on high light availability and deep-water access during the dry season. However, the role of dry-season light variation in influencing leaf traits of species with inverted phenology remains poorly understood. We examined how plant size, reproductive stage, and canopy structure influence trait variation in B. nervosa during the dry season. We measured plant height and diameter, reproductive status, and canopy structure using hemispherical photographs to estimate canopy openness, leaf area index, and transmitted light. Leaf structural traits included specific leaf area (SLA), thickness, water content, and stomatal density, while photochemical performance was assessed via chlorophyll fluorescence and rapid light curves. Principal component analysis and linear regression were used to examine trait-environment relationships. Photosynthetic efficiency was not affected by plant size or reproductive status. No strong trait correlations were observed for leaf water content and stomatal density. A negative relationship between canopy openness, transmitted light, and SLA indicates structural leaf adaptation to light conditions, with lower SLA values occurring under reduced light. In B. nervosa, leaf traits are driven more by light than by water availability during the dry season. This suggests that reverse phenology in phreatophytic species is functionally decoupled from seasonal water stress.