The Response of Tree Seedlings to Canopy Disturbance in an Amazonian Rain Forest
Author | : S. B. Jennings |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 390 |
Release | : 1997 |
ISBN-10 | : OCLC:43122506 |
ISBN-13 | : |
Rating | : 4/5 ( Downloads) |
Download or read book The Response of Tree Seedlings to Canopy Disturbance in an Amazonian Rain Forest written by S. B. Jennings and published by . This book was released on 1997 with total page 390 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This study set out to explore the hypothesis that species richness of tropical rain forest is maintained by defferential responses of seedlings to varying degrees pf canppy distubance. Field was conducted in the Tapajos forest. Para Brazil. Seedling populations were monitored for two years in a 500 x 10 m belt transset. Ten of the eleven species had signifiantly clumped spatial distributions. The location of clumps was determined by the proximity of parant trees rather than canopy structure. Seedling mortality tended to reduce clumping. Large seedlings were proportionately more common in areas of low seedling density. Changes in population size large, and different species had differente temporal patterns of population change. It was concluded that lottery processes are likely to be important in maintaning species in tropical rain forest communities. In the same belt transect, the mortality and height growth of seedlings of six tree species were measured for two years. Mortality was greater at low crown exposure, and it was here that interspecific dfferences in mortality were most pronounced. Patterns of mortality did not reflect the known ecology of the species, and appenared to be the result of population. age/size structure. Height growth was low at low crown exposure, but increased with increasing crown exposure in five of the six species. Heoght growth did not result in changes in rank height order between species. The greatest interspecific differences in height growth occurred at the medium crown exposure classes. Events and processes ocurring under the closed canopy are hypothesised to be of grat importance in determining the composition and structure of seedling populations, and hence the community on which gap phase processes operate. An experiment was conducted to test the hypothesis that seedlings partition the forest microclimatic gradient. Seedlings of six tree species were transplanted into the forest, and a microclimatic gradient was artificially created manipulating the forest canopy. Canopy opening increased PPFD, temperature and decreased relative humidity, but hat comparatively litle effect on gravimentric soil water content. The microclimate was highly seasonal, with dry season PPFD and temperature higher and relative and soil water and lower than in the wet season. Microclimate also fluctuated on a number of different spatial and temporal scales. During the study period, analysis of the growth and mortality of the transplanted seedlings showed little evidence that species partitioned the microclimatic gradient. The tallest species at the time of gap creation remained tallest for 25 months all levels of irradiance, and irrespective of the season of gap creation. Changes in rank order were confined to the subordinate species.