Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications

Inter-specific patterns of seed longevity in the soil, germination, and survival and growth of transplanted seedlings under closed canopy of nine trees, Cordia alliodora, Hampea appendiculata, Jacaranda copaia, Laetia procera, Rollinia microsepala, Simarouba amara, Stryphnodendron microstachyum, Tri...

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Main Author: Guariguata, Manuel R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18133
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author Guariguata, Manuel R.
author_browse Guariguata, Manuel R.
author_facet Guariguata, Manuel R.
author_sort Guariguata, Manuel R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Inter-specific patterns of seed longevity in the soil, germination, and survival and growth of transplanted seedlings under closed canopy of nine trees, Cordia alliodora, Hampea appendiculata, Jacaranda copaia, Laetia procera, Rollinia microsepala, Simarouba amara, Stryphnodendron microstachyum, Trichospermum grewiifolium and Vochysia ferruginea, common in secondary forest stands in wet, lowland Costa Rica, are described. Longevity of experimental seed cohorts differed markedly among species, from <3 mo (Cordia, Hampea, Simarouba, Vochysia), to >1 yr (Stryphnodendron). Similarly, germination of recently dispersed seeds in the understorey ranged from 0% in Laetia to >75% in Cordia and Vochysia. In contrast, seedling survival was uniformly low (<10% survival one year after transplanting except for Stryphnodendron, which showed ~ 20% survival). Implications of these findings for the management of secondary forest stands for timber production vary. All the species require nearly complete canopy opening to regenerate. Some species germinate well in the shade and can be managed at the seedlings stage by opening up the canopy a few months after germination (e.g., Cordia, Simarouba, Vochysia). Species showing little or no germination under closed canopy (e.g., Jacaranda, Laetia, Rollinia) need canopy removal to germinate adequately. Any canopy manipulation must be performed within 6 months. Site preparation may be necessary to control herbs and shrubs. The study results suggest that ecological classifications of trees solely based on light preferences for stem growth may fail to account for important differences among species in their regeneration mode. This is of particular importance for refining silvicultural guidelines in neo-tropical secondary forests.
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spelling CGSpace181332025-01-24T14:20:42Z Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications Guariguata, Manuel R. forest trees secondary forests forest management Inter-specific patterns of seed longevity in the soil, germination, and survival and growth of transplanted seedlings under closed canopy of nine trees, Cordia alliodora, Hampea appendiculata, Jacaranda copaia, Laetia procera, Rollinia microsepala, Simarouba amara, Stryphnodendron microstachyum, Trichospermum grewiifolium and Vochysia ferruginea, common in secondary forest stands in wet, lowland Costa Rica, are described. Longevity of experimental seed cohorts differed markedly among species, from <3 mo (Cordia, Hampea, Simarouba, Vochysia), to >1 yr (Stryphnodendron). Similarly, germination of recently dispersed seeds in the understorey ranged from 0% in Laetia to >75% in Cordia and Vochysia. In contrast, seedling survival was uniformly low (<10% survival one year after transplanting except for Stryphnodendron, which showed ~ 20% survival). Implications of these findings for the management of secondary forest stands for timber production vary. All the species require nearly complete canopy opening to regenerate. Some species germinate well in the shade and can be managed at the seedlings stage by opening up the canopy a few months after germination (e.g., Cordia, Simarouba, Vochysia). Species showing little or no germination under closed canopy (e.g., Jacaranda, Laetia, Rollinia) need canopy removal to germinate adequately. Any canopy manipulation must be performed within 6 months. Site preparation may be necessary to control herbs and shrubs. The study results suggest that ecological classifications of trees solely based on light preferences for stem growth may fail to account for important differences among species in their regeneration mode. This is of particular importance for refining silvicultural guidelines in neo-tropical secondary forests. 2000 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18133 en Guariguata, M.R. 2000. Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications . Ecological Applications 10 (1) :145-154.
spellingShingle forest trees
secondary forests
forest management
Guariguata, Manuel R.
Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title_full Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title_fullStr Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title_full_unstemmed Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title_short Seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests: management implications
title_sort seed and seedling ecology of tree species in neotropical secondary forests management implications
topic forest trees
secondary forests
forest management
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18133
work_keys_str_mv AT guariguatamanuelr seedandseedlingecologyoftreespeciesinneotropicalsecondaryforestsmanagementimplications