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  1. Harrison, Rhett (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT Belowground resources are key determinants of seedling growth and survival in tropical forests. Nutrients and light may limit plant growth the most in tropical wet forests, whereas water may limit plant growth more in tropical dry forests. Nitrogen (N)‐fixing species play an important role in the nitrogen and carbon cycles across tropical dry forests. However, studies investigating the joint effects of water and nutrients on the physiology and performance of N‐fixing species are scarce. We implemented a full factorial shade house experiment that manipulated water and nutrients (NPK 20:20:20 and complete micronutrients) using eight tree species representing N‐fixing and non‐fixing tree species in the tropical dry forest of Costa Rica to determine: (1) How plant responses to water and nutrient availability vary between N‐fixing and non‐fixing tree species?; and (2) How nutrient and/or water availability influences seedling water‐ and nutrient‐use traits? We found that growth and physiological responses to water and nutrient addition depended directly on the capacity of species to fix atmospheric N2. N‐fixing species responded more strongly to nutrient addition, accumulating 67% more total biomass on average (approximately double that of non‐fixing taxa) and increasing average height growth rate by 41%. N‐fixing species accumulated more biomass without compromising water‐use efficiency, taking full advantage of the increased nutrient availability. Interestingly, results from our experiment show that increased water availability rarely influenced tropical dry forest seedling performance, whereas nutrient availability had a strong effect on biomass and growth. Overall, our results highlight the ability of N‐fixing seedlings to take advantage of local soil resource heterogeneity, which may help to explain the dominance of N‐fixing trees in tropical dry forests. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026