Catastrophic natural origin of a species-poor tree community in the world's richest forest

被引:22
|
作者
Pitman, NCA
Cerón, CE
Reyes, CI
Thurber, M
Arellano, J
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Nicholas Sch Environm & Earth Sci, Ctr Trop Conservat, Durham, NC 27708 USA
[2] Univ Cent Ecuador, Escuela Biol, Quito, Ecuador
[3] Walsh Environm Scientists & Engineers, Quito, Ecuador
关键词
Amazon; disturbance; Ecuador; El Reventador; history; natural disaster; trees; tree diversity; volcano;
D O I
10.1017/S0266467405002713
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Upper Amazonian tree communities are famous for their very high alpha-diversity. This paper describes an anomalous forest just 6 km south of the equator in lowland Ecuador that is structurally mature, surrounded by hyperdiverse forest, but strikingly poor in species. To investigate the anomaly, a I-ha tree inventory and soil analysis were carried out and compared with 15 similar surveys of upland forest in the same region. The anomalous forest contains only 102 tree species ha(-1), compared with a regional mean of 239 +/- 28 species ha(-1).It is structurally indistinguishable from richer forests, and closest in composition to upland forest, but lacks the uplands' typically rich understorey tree community. Three hypotheses for its origin are examined: recovery from anthropogenic disturbance, unique soil conditions and recovery from a large-scale natural catastrophe. The third hypothesis is the best supported. Mineralogical, geological and remote-sensing evidence, and C-14-Abstract: Upper Amazonian tree communities are famous for their very high alpha-diversity. This paper describes an anomalous forest just 6 km south of the equator in lowland Ecuador that is structurally mature, surrounded by hyperdiverse forest, but strikingly poor in species. To investigate the anomaly, a I-ha tree inventory and soil analysis were carried out and compared with 15 similar surveys of upland forest in the same region. The anomalous forest contains only 102 tree species ha-1, compared with a regional mean of 239 +/- 28 species ha(-1). It is structurally indistinguishable from richer forests, and closest in composition to upland forest, but lacks the uplands' typically rich understorey tree community. Three hypotheses for its origin are examined: recovery from anthropogenic disturbance, unique soil conditions and recovery from a large-scale natural catastrophe. The third hypothesis is the best supported. Mineralogical, geological and remote-sensing evidence, and C-14-dating suggest that the forest grows on a vast debris plain left by a catastrophic flooding event roughly 500 y ago. The forest's low diversity today is most likely due to the failure of a full complement of the region's tree species - especially understorey taxa, - to recolonize the outwash plain in the time since the disaster.dating suggest that the forest grows on a vast debris plain left by a catastrophic flooding event roughly 500 y ago. The forest's low diversity today is most likely due to the failure of a full complement of the region's tree species - especially understorey taxa - to recolonize the outwash plain in the time since the disaster.
引用
收藏
页码:559 / 568
页数:10
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