Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica

The study characterised stand structure and floristic composition of woody life forms in three, 16-18 year old secondary stands that regenerated after pasture abandonment, and three nearby old-growth stands of tropical rainforest in lowland Costa Rica. Basal area and stem density for each of four pl...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Guariguata, Manuel R., Chazdon, R.L., Denslow, J.S., Dupuy, J.M., Anderson, L.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17824
_version_ 1855524375586930688
author Guariguata, Manuel R.
Chazdon, R.L.
Denslow, J.S.
Dupuy, J.M.
Anderson, L.
author_browse Anderson, L.
Chazdon, R.L.
Denslow, J.S.
Dupuy, J.M.
Guariguata, Manuel R.
author_facet Guariguata, Manuel R.
Chazdon, R.L.
Denslow, J.S.
Dupuy, J.M.
Anderson, L.
author_sort Guariguata, Manuel R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The study characterised stand structure and floristic composition of woody life forms in three, 16-18 year old secondary stands that regenerated after pasture abandonment, and three nearby old-growth stands of tropical rainforest in lowland Costa Rica. Basal area and stem density for each of four plant size classes (seedling, saplings, treelets, trees) were similar among stand types, but density of adult canopy palms (individuals over 10 cm dbh), was lower in the secondary stands. The observed rapid woody regrowth, compared to other published studies in the lowland neotropics, can be attributed to moderate land use and possibly to the influence of nutrient-rich volcanic soils in the study area. Overall, plant species richness was lower in the secondary stands, but this difference was less pronounced in the smallest size classes (seedlings, saplings). Median percentage similarity of all pairwise stand comparisons showed that floristic composition of saplings (stems over 1 m tall and over 5 cm dbh) was more similar between secondary and old-growth stands than for trees (stems over 10 cm dbh). Because the potential value of secondary forests in conserving woody plant diversity appears highest for the young size classes, we suggest that further studies on floristic composition, especially those addressing the dynamics of the understorey component, are needed to refine our understanding of the role of this natural resource in the maintenance of plant biodiversity in disturbed landscapes.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace17824
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1997
publishDateRange 1997
publishDateSort 1997
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace178242025-01-24T14:12:48Z Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica Guariguata, Manuel R. Chazdon, R.L. Denslow, J.S. Dupuy, J.M. Anderson, L. lowland areas forest trees secondary forests The study characterised stand structure and floristic composition of woody life forms in three, 16-18 year old secondary stands that regenerated after pasture abandonment, and three nearby old-growth stands of tropical rainforest in lowland Costa Rica. Basal area and stem density for each of four plant size classes (seedling, saplings, treelets, trees) were similar among stand types, but density of adult canopy palms (individuals over 10 cm dbh), was lower in the secondary stands. The observed rapid woody regrowth, compared to other published studies in the lowland neotropics, can be attributed to moderate land use and possibly to the influence of nutrient-rich volcanic soils in the study area. Overall, plant species richness was lower in the secondary stands, but this difference was less pronounced in the smallest size classes (seedlings, saplings). Median percentage similarity of all pairwise stand comparisons showed that floristic composition of saplings (stems over 1 m tall and over 5 cm dbh) was more similar between secondary and old-growth stands than for trees (stems over 10 cm dbh). Because the potential value of secondary forests in conserving woody plant diversity appears highest for the young size classes, we suggest that further studies on floristic composition, especially those addressing the dynamics of the understorey component, are needed to refine our understanding of the role of this natural resource in the maintenance of plant biodiversity in disturbed landscapes. 1997 2012-06-04T09:04:39Z 2012-06-04T09:04:39Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17824 en Guariguata, M.R., Chazdon, R.L., Denslow, J.S., Dupuy, J.M., Anderson, L. 1997. Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica . Plant Ecology 132 :107-120.
spellingShingle lowland areas
forest trees
secondary forests
Guariguata, Manuel R.
Chazdon, R.L.
Denslow, J.S.
Dupuy, J.M.
Anderson, L.
Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title_full Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title_fullStr Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title_full_unstemmed Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title_short Structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland Costa Rica
title_sort structure and floristic of secondary and old growth stands in lowland costa rica
topic lowland areas
forest trees
secondary forests
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17824
work_keys_str_mv AT guariguatamanuelr structureandfloristicofsecondaryandoldgrowthstandsinlowlandcostarica
AT chazdonrl structureandfloristicofsecondaryandoldgrowthstandsinlowlandcostarica
AT denslowjs structureandfloristicofsecondaryandoldgrowthstandsinlowlandcostarica
AT dupuyjm structureandfloristicofsecondaryandoldgrowthstandsinlowlandcostarica
AT andersonl structureandfloristicofsecondaryandoldgrowthstandsinlowlandcostarica