There are limits to every stress factor. Bow design is limited by the nature of the materials. Nearly every wood is 3 to 4 times stronger in tension than in compression. Reducing the amount of wood that carries the compression load can only reduce the strength of the limb.
If the belly of the bow is narrowed greatly, the narrow ridge (or two ridges) will fail early, but if narrow enough and the limb is thick enough, the stress may be handled successfully by a deeper layer of wood. In that case, the bow will not fail, but will be carrying the failed ridges along for the ride with no benefit from that wood.
Yew has its own rules. I've never used it, but it does well with a thicker rounded belly.
Please forgive my earlier abruptness. I'm 75, and sometimes forget that I was a long time learning a lot of things that others learned earlier.