Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis

It is not simple to predict how environmental changes may impact tropical forest species diversity. Published hypotheses are almost invariably too incomplete, too poorly specified and too dependent upon unrealistic assumptions to be useful. Ecologist have sought theoretical simplicity, and while thi...

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Main Author: Sheil, Douglas
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18093
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author_browse Sheil, Douglas
author_facet Sheil, Douglas
author_sort Sheil, Douglas
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description It is not simple to predict how environmental changes may impact tropical forest species diversity. Published hypotheses are almost invariably too incomplete, too poorly specified and too dependent upon unrealistic assumptions to be useful. Ecologist have sought theoretical simplicity, and while this has provided many elegant abstract concepts, it has hindered the attainment of more practical goals. The problem is not how to judge the individual hypotheses and arguments, but rather how to build upon and combine the many hard-won facts and principles into an integrated science. Controversy is inevitable when the assumptions, definitions and applications of a given hypothesis are unclear. Elegance, as an end in itself, has too often been used to justify abstract simplification and lack of operational definition. Clarifying and combining hypotheses while avoiding assumptions provides potentially more useful, if less elegant, stand-point. An appraisal of Connell's intermediate disturbance hypothesis, and its application to long-term observations from a Ugandan forest illustrates these concerns. Current emphases encourage ecologists to exclude consideration of environmental instability and non-pristine ecosystems. In reality, many environmental changes and ecological processses contribute to both the accumulation and erosion of diversity, at all spatial and temporal scales. Site histories, contexts, long-term processes, species-pool dynamics, and the role of people require greater emphasis. These considerations reveal that many environmental changes, even those associated with degradation, can lead to transient rise in species densities. Drawing on related studies, such as forest yield prediction, suggests that the formulation and calibration of simulation models provides the most tractable means to address the complexity of real vegetation. Simulation-based approaches will become increasingly useful both in unifying the study of vegetation dynamics and in providing improved predictive capacity. Quantification of the processes, scales and sensitivities of the dynamics of tropical forest communities remains a major challenge
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spelling CGSpace180932025-01-24T14:12:22Z Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis Sheil, Douglas tropical forests biodiversity environment change plant communities population dynamics vegetation simulation models It is not simple to predict how environmental changes may impact tropical forest species diversity. Published hypotheses are almost invariably too incomplete, too poorly specified and too dependent upon unrealistic assumptions to be useful. Ecologist have sought theoretical simplicity, and while this has provided many elegant abstract concepts, it has hindered the attainment of more practical goals. The problem is not how to judge the individual hypotheses and arguments, but rather how to build upon and combine the many hard-won facts and principles into an integrated science. Controversy is inevitable when the assumptions, definitions and applications of a given hypothesis are unclear. Elegance, as an end in itself, has too often been used to justify abstract simplification and lack of operational definition. Clarifying and combining hypotheses while avoiding assumptions provides potentially more useful, if less elegant, stand-point. An appraisal of Connell's intermediate disturbance hypothesis, and its application to long-term observations from a Ugandan forest illustrates these concerns. Current emphases encourage ecologists to exclude consideration of environmental instability and non-pristine ecosystems. In reality, many environmental changes and ecological processses contribute to both the accumulation and erosion of diversity, at all spatial and temporal scales. Site histories, contexts, long-term processes, species-pool dynamics, and the role of people require greater emphasis. These considerations reveal that many environmental changes, even those associated with degradation, can lead to transient rise in species densities. Drawing on related studies, such as forest yield prediction, suggests that the formulation and calibration of simulation models provides the most tractable means to address the complexity of real vegetation. Simulation-based approaches will become increasingly useful both in unifying the study of vegetation dynamics and in providing improved predictive capacity. Quantification of the processes, scales and sensitivities of the dynamics of tropical forest communities remains a major challenge 1999 2012-06-04T09:06:05Z 2012-06-04T09:06:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18093 en Sheil, D. 1999. Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis . Journal of Vegetation Science 10 :851-860.
spellingShingle tropical forests
biodiversity
environment
change
plant communities
population dynamics
vegetation
simulation models
Sheil, Douglas
Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title_full Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title_fullStr Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title_short Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
title_sort tropical forest diversity environmental change and species augmentation after the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
topic tropical forests
biodiversity
environment
change
plant communities
population dynamics
vegetation
simulation models
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18093
work_keys_str_mv AT sheildouglas tropicalforestdiversityenvironmentalchangeandspeciesaugmentationaftertheintermediatedisturbancehypothesis