Early recruitment dynamics in tropical restoration

被引:50
|
作者
de la Pena-Domene, Marines [1 ,3 ]
Martinez-Garza, Cristina [2 ]
Howe, Henry F. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Fac Ciencias, Mexico City 04510, DF, Mexico
[2] Univ Autonoma Estado Morelos, Ctr Invest Biodiversidad & Conservac, Cuernavaca 62209, Morelos, Mexico
[3] Univ Illinois, Dept Biol Sci, Chicago, IL 60607 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
dispersal mode; experimental restoration; life history; Mexico; movement ecology; seed dispersal; seedling establishment; succession; tropical rainforest; TUXTLAS BIOLOGICAL STATION; NATIVE FOREST REGENERATION; SEED DISPERSAL; LOS-TUXTLAS; RAIN-FOREST; SPECIES RICHNESS; ABANDONED PASTURE; TREE; FRAGMENTS; DIVERSITY;
D O I
10.1890/12-1728.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Unassisted secondary succession in abandoned tropical pastures often results in species-poor forests of pioneer trees that persist for decades. We characterize recruitment rates of woody vegetation in planting treatments during the first 60 months of experimental restoration on thin, eroded soils at Los Tuxtlas, southern Mexico. We test the hypothesis that recruitment of later-successional trees is greater in fenced plots planted with native trees than in fenced controls that simulate natural succession, and further that recruitment of such species would be greater in plots planted with animal-dispersed trees than in those planted with wind-dispersed trees. Results indicated much greater recruitment of later-successional animal-dispersed trees in planted plots as compared with controls. Three censuses per year recorded 960 recruited individuals of 44 species of trees and shrubs from 20-60 months after cattle exclusion. Ninety-six percent of recruits were not of planted species. Repeated-measures analyses of variance indicated that recruited communities included more species of pioneers than of later-successional trees and shrubs, with more individuals and species dispersed by animals than by wind. Recruitment of pioneers did not differ between control and planted plots. Later-successional recruits dispersed by animals accumulated >10 times faster in planted than control plots, with apparent acceleration after planted Cecropia obtusifolia and Ficus yoponensis first produced fleshy fruits 48 months after cattle exclusion. Sparse later-successional wind-dispersed recruits did not differ by treatment. Our preliminary results over the first five years after cattle exclusion indicate that planted stands clearly accelerate succession through accumulation of later-successional trees and shrubs dispersed by animals.
引用
收藏
页码:1124 / 1134
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The effects of forest type, harvesting and stand refinement on early seedling recruitment in a tropical rain forest
    Forget, PM
    Rankin-De Merona, JM
    Julliot, C
    JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2001, 17 : 593 - 609
  • [42] Identifying tropical penaeid recruitment patterns
    Watson, RA
    Turnbull, CT
    Derbyshire, KJ
    MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 1996, 47 (01) : 77 - 85
  • [43] Dispersal of sea lamprey larvae during early life: relevance for recruitment dynamics
    Amy L. Derosier
    Michael L. Jones
    Kim T. Scribner
    Environmental Biology of Fishes, 2007, 78 : 271 - 284
  • [44] Dispersal of sea lamprey larvae during early life: relevance for recruitment dynamics
    Derosier, Amy L.
    Jones, Michael L.
    Scribner, Kim T.
    ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 2007, 78 (03) : 271 - 284
  • [45] Provision of early mussel life stages via macroalgae enhances recruitment and uncovers a novel restoration technique
    Toone, Trevyn A.
    Hillman, Jenny R.
    Benjamin, Emilee D.
    Handley, Sean
    Jeffs, Andrew
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2023, 566
  • [46] Predictable hydrology, habitat and food resources determine fish recruitment dynamics in an incised tropical Australian river
    Godfrey, Paul C.
    Pusey, Bradley J.
    Pearson, Richard G.
    Arthington, Angela H.
    ECOHYDROLOGY, 2022, 15 (07)
  • [47] Tropical Forest Restoration in the Eastern Himalaya: Evaluating Early Survival and Growth of Native Tree Species
    Borawake, Noopur
    Datta, Aparajita
    Naniwadekar, Rohit
    ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION, 2021, 39 (03) : 194 - 205
  • [48] Halophyte recruitment in a salt marsh restoration site
    Lindig-Cisneros, R
    Zedler, JB
    ESTUARIES, 2002, 25 (6A): : 1174 - 1183
  • [49] STRATEGIES IN MUSCLE RECRUITMENT FOR FES IN WALKING RESTORATION
    PEDOTTI, A
    FERRARIN, M
    IMAGES OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY, PTS 1-6, 1989, 11 : 1007 - 1008
  • [50] Employer Postcrisis Image Restoration: Implications for Recruitment
    Steiner, Zachary
    Byrne, Zinta
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUSINESS COMMUNICATION, 2022, 59 (04) : 551 - 582