Authors
Edwin Lebrija‐Trejos, Frans Bongers, Eduardo A Pérez‐García, Jorge A Meave
Publication date
2008/7
Journal
Biotropica
Volume
40
Issue
4
Pages
422-431
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
We analyzed successional patterns in a very dry tropical deciduous forest by using 15 plots differing in age after abandonment and contrasted them to secondary successions elsewhere in the tropics. We used multivariate ordination and nonlinear models to examine changes in composition and structure and to estimate forest recovery rates and resilience. A shrub phase characterized early succession (0–3 yr); afterwards, the tree Mimosa acantholoba became dominant. Below its canopy, sprouts and seed‐regenerated individuals of mature forest species slowly accumulated. Canopy height, plant density, and crown cover stabilized in less than 15 yr, whereas species richness, diversity, and basal area continued to increase. The pioneer species group has very low diversity and the long‐lived pioneer phase typical of humid forests is absent; species composition may therefore recover soon as suggested by …
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