Phylogenetic community and nearest neighbor structure of disturbed tropical rain forests encroached by Streblus macrophyllus

被引:0
|
作者
Hai N.H. [1 ]
Erfanifard Y. [2 ]
Bao T.Q. [3 ]
Petritan A.M. [4 ]
Mai T.H. [5 ]
Petritan I.C. [6 ]
机构
[1] Department of Forest inventory and Planning, Faculty of Silviculture, Vietnam Forestry University, Hanoi
[2] Department of Remote Sensing and GIS, University of Tehran, Tehran
[3] Faculty of Forest Resources and Environmental Management, Vietnam Forestry University, Hanoi
[4] National Institute for Research-Development in Forestry 'Marin Dracea', Eroilor 128, Voluntari
[5] College of Wood Industry and Interior Design, Vietnam Forestry University, Hanoi
[6] Faculty of Silviculture and Forest Engineering, Transilvania University, Sirul Beethoven 1, Brasov
来源
Petritan, Ion Catalin (petritan@unitbv.ro) | 1600年 / MDPI AG, Postfach, Basel, CH-4005, Switzerland卷 / 11期
关键词
Dominance; Mingling; Nearest neighborhood; Phylogenetic structure; Self-thinning; Uniform angle index;
D O I
10.3390/F11070722
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although woody plant encroachment of tropical forest ecosystems has been related to altered disturbance regimes, its impacts on the nearest neighborhood structures and community phylogenetics are still poorly understood. Streblus macrophyllus is a light-demanding species during its early life stages and is shade-tolerant as a mature tree. S. macrophyllus can be found in tropical karst evergreen forests in northernVietnam. It often regenerates at high densities in anthropogenic disturbed forest stands. To understand the structural patterns of disturbed forests encroached by S. macrophyllus at different abundance levels, three fully mapped 1-ha plots were established in Cuc Phuong National Park. Methods considering the phylogenetic community and nearest neighbor statistics were applied to identify how community structure changes during S. macrophyllus encroachment. Results showed that phylogenetic distance, phylogenetic diversity, and mean phylogenetic distance increased when species diversity increased and the abundance of S. macrophyllus decreased in forest communities. Net related index values were positive, which indicates a clustered phylogenetic structure among all sampled forest communities. S. macrophyllus trees were mixed well with heterospecifics and had regular to aggregated distributions, whereas the species showed evidence of being a strong competitor with its neighbors. Competition could be a major ecological process regulating forest communities encroached by S. macrophyllus. According to the forest disturbance effects, phylogenetic community properties showed the loss of phylogenetic relatedness when S. macrophyllus increased in abundance. To our knowledge, S. macrophyllus encroaches tropical rain forest communities as a disturbance-adapted species. © 2020 by the authors.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Contrasting structure and composition of the understory in species-rich tropical rain forests
    LaFrankie, James V.
    Ashton, Peter S.
    Chuyong, George B.
    Co, Leonardo
    Condit, Richard
    Davies, Stuart J.
    Foster, Robin
    Hubbell, Stephen P.
    Kenfack, David
    Lagunzad, Daniel
    Losos, Elizabeth C.
    Nor, Noor Supardi Md.
    Tan, Sylvester
    Thomas, Duncan W.
    Valencia, Renato
    Villa, Gorky
    ECOLOGY, 2006, 87 (09) : 2298 - 2305
  • [22] Patterns of community composition in two tropical tree frog assemblages:: separating spatial structure and environmental effects in disturbed and undisturbed forests
    Ernst, Raffael
    Rodel, Mark-Oliver
    JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2008, 24 : 111 - 120
  • [23] Tree component structure of tropical upper montane rain forests in Southern Brazil
    Scheer, Mauricio Bergamini
    Mocochinski, Alan Yukio
    Roderjan, Carlos Vellozo
    ACTA BOTANICA BRASILICA, 2011, 25 (04) : 735 - 750
  • [24] Data Clustering Based on Community Structure in Mutual k-Nearest Neighbor Graph
    Zhang, Honglei
    Kiranyaz, Serkan
    Gabbouj, Moncef
    2018 41ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND SIGNAL PROCESSING (TSP), 2018, : 262 - 268
  • [25] Maximum canopy height is associated with community phylogenetic structure in boreal forests
    Mao, Ling-Feng
    Dong, Yu-Ran
    Xing, Bing-Bing
    Chen, You-Hua
    Dennett, Jacqueline
    Bater, Christopher
    Stadt, John J.
    Nielsen, Scott E.
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2023, 16 (04)
  • [26] Coexistence and community structure of tropical trees in a Hawaiian montane rain forest
    Hatfield, JS
    Link, WA
    Dawson, DK
    Lindquist, EL
    BIOTROPICA, 1996, 28 (04) : 746 - 758
  • [27] The Effects of Soil Bacterial Community Structure on Decomposition in a Tropical Rain Forest
    Leff, Jonathan W.
    Nemergut, Diana R.
    Grandy, A. Stuart
    O'Neill, Sean P.
    Wickings, Kyle
    Townsend, Alan R.
    Cleveland, Cory C.
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2012, 15 (02) : 284 - 298
  • [28] The Effects of Soil Bacterial Community Structure on Decomposition in a Tropical Rain Forest
    Jonathan W. Leff
    Diana R. Nemergut
    A. Stuart Grandy
    Sean P. O’Neill
    Kyle Wickings
    Alan R. Townsend
    Cory C. Cleveland
    Ecosystems, 2012, 15 : 284 - 298
  • [29] Primate community of the tropical rain forests of Saraca-Taquera National Forest, Para, Brazil
    Oliveira, L. C.
    Loretto, D.
    Viana, L. R.
    Silva-Jr, J. S.
    Fernandes, W.
    BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY, 2009, 69 (04) : 1091 - 1099
  • [30] Functional traits of individual trees reveal ecological constraints on community assembly in tropical rain forests
    Paine, C. E. Timothy
    Baraloto, Christopher
    Chave, Jerome
    Herault, Bruno
    OIKOS, 2011, 120 (05) : 720 - 727