Authors
Stephen P Hubbell, Robin B Foster, Sean T O'Brien, Kyle E Harms, Richard Condit, Beat Wechsler, S Joseph Wright, S Loo De Lao
Publication date
1999/1/22
Journal
Science
Volume
283
Issue
5401
Pages
554-557
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Light gap disturbances have been postulated to play a major role in maintaining tree diversity in species-rich tropical forests. This hypothesis was tested in more than 1200 gaps in a tropical forest in Panama over a 13-year period. Gaps increased seedling establishment and sapling densities, but this effect was nonspecific and broad-spectrum, and species richness per stem was identical in gaps and in nongap control sites. Spatial and temporal variation in the gap disturbance regime did not explain variation in species richness. The species composition of gaps was unpredictable even for pioneer tree species. Strong recruitment limitation appears to decouple the gap disturbance regime from control of tree diversity in this tropical forest.
Total citations
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