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Upland Forests (upland + forest)
Selected AbstractsUSING UPLAND FOREST IN SHIMENTAI NATURE RESERVE, CHINA,GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, Issue 3 2003STEVE S. W. XU ABSTRACT. The Shimentai Nature Reserve in Yingde County, Guangdong Province, China, established recently in a subtropical upland forest area, has served for ages as an essential and customary source of livelihood for local people. Assessment of forest usage indicates heavy reliance by villagers on its diversified biotic resources. This forest dependence, associated with socioeconomic factors such as distance from village, ethnic origin, out-migration of rural youngsters, and a local tradition of conservation, is unlikely to decline in the near future. The reserve management recognizes the need to address the livelihood issues of local people and to win local support. A pragmatic adherence to provincial and higher-level policies that exclude forest-tapping activities could lead to more people-versus-park conflicts, which would dilute fundamental conservation objectives. A more enlightened and localized approach that nurtures a synergy between limited forest use and conservation while helping to develop new income sources could furnish workable alternatives. [source] Herpetofaunal Diversity and Abundance in Tropical Upland Forests of Cameroon and Panama,BIOTROPICA, Issue 1 2001Ulrich Hofer ABSTRACT Two tropical upland forests, Mount Kupe in Cameroon and Bosque Protector Palo Seco in Panama, were compared in terms of herpetofaunal species richness and density of individuals. Based on rarefaction, whereby samples are standardized for abundance, Palo Seco had significantly more species of frogs and lizards. Extrapolations to total local species richness, by fitting the Michaelis,Menten equation to the species accumulation curves and by using Chao's estimator, yielded divergent results: more lizard species on Mount Kupe, and an equal number of frogs at both sites. These disparities can be accounted for by differences in evenness, which was higher in Palo Seco. Frog density was significantly higher on Mount Kupe, snake density significantly higher in Palo Seco, and lizards exhibited no density difference. Overall, the results revealed a less consistent pattern and more moderate differences than what is known from southeast Asian,-Central American comparisons. This outcome is discussed in the light of available knowledge, but quantitative data from African forests are too sparse to allow general conclusions. Se comparó la herpetofauna de dos bosques tropicales húmedos ubicados en las montañas, Mount Kupe en Camerún y Bosque Protector Palo Seco en Panamá, en relación a la riqueza especifica y la densidad de individuos. Con base en el método de rarefacción, en el cual los muestreos se estandarizan en base a su abudancia, Palo Seco presenta significativamente mas especies de anuros y lagartos. Extrapolaciones con respecto a la riqueza especifica total de los sitios, mediante un ajuste de la ecuación de Michaelis-Menten a las curvas de acumulación de especies, y utilizando el índice de Chao, produjeron resultados divergentes: más especies de lagartos en Mount Kupe, y el mismo número de especies de anuros en ambos sitios. Dichas diferencias pueden resultar de una equitatividad más alta en Palo Seco. La densidad de anuros resultó significativamente más alta en Mount Kupe, mientras que la densidad de serpientes fue significativamente más alta en Palo Seco, y no se encontró una diferencia entre k densidad de lagartos en ambos sitios. En general los resultados muestran patrones menos consistentes y diferencias mis moderadas de las que se conocen entre el Sureste de Asia y Centroamerica. Se discuten los resultados con base en la información disponible, sin embargo, la existencia de datos cuantitativos para bosques africanos es demasiado escaza como para permitir conclusiones generales. RESUMES Se comparó la herpetofauna de dos bosques tropicales húmedos ubicados en las montañas, Mount Kupe en Camerún y Bosque Protector Palo Seco en Panamá, en relación a la riqueza especifica y la densidad de individuos. Con base en el método de rarefacción, en el cual los muestreos se estandarizan en base a su abudancia, Palo Seco presenta significativamente mas especies de anuros y lagartos. Extrapolaciones con respecto a la riqueza especifica total de los sitios, mediante un ajuste de la ecuación de Michaelis-Menten a las curvas de acumulación de especies, y utilizando el índice de Chao, produjeron resultados divergentes: más especies de lagartos en Mount Kupe, y el mismo número de especies de anuros en ambos sitios. Dichas diferencias pueden resultar de una equitatividad más alta en Palo Seco. La densidad de anuros resultó significativamente más alta en Mount Kupe, mientras que la densidad de serpientes fue significativamente más alta en Palo Seco, y no se encontró una diferencia entre k densidad de lagartos en ambos sitios. En general los resultados muestran patrones menos consistentes y diferencias mis moderadas de las que se conocen entre el Sureste de Asia y Centroamerica. Se discuten los resultados con base en la información disponible, sin embargo, la existencia de datos cuantitativos para bosques africanos es demasiado escaza como para permitir conclusiones generales. [source] Relationships between soil hydrology and forest structure and composition in the southern Brazilian AmazonJOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 2 2007Stefan Jirka Abstract Question: Is soil hydrology an important niche-based driver of biodiversity in tropical forests? More specifically, we asked whether seasonal dynamics in soil water regime contributed to vegetation partitioning into distinct forest types. Location: Tropical rain forest in northwestern Mato Grosso, Brazil. Methods: We investigated the distribution of trees and lianas , 1 cm DBH in ten transects that crossed distinct hydrological transitions. Soil water content and depth to water table were measured regularly over a 13-month period. Results: A detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) of 20 dominant species and structural attributes in 10 × 10 m subplots segregated three major forest types: (1) high-statured upland forest with intermediate stem density, (2) medium-statured forest dominated by palms, and (3) low-statured campinarana forest with high stem density. During the rainy season and transition into the dry season, distinct characteristics of the soil water regime (i.e. hydro-indicators) were closely associated with each vegetation community. Stand structural attributes and hydro-indicators were statistically different among forest types. Conclusions: Some upland species appeared intolerant of anaerobic conditions as they were not present in palm and campinarana sites, which experienced prolonged periods of saturation at the soil surface. A shallow impermeable layer restricted rooting depth in the campinarana community, which could heighten drought stress during the dry season. The only vegetation able to persist in campinarana sites were short-statured trees that appear to be well-adapted to the dual extremes of inundation and drought. [source] The effects of fire, local environment and time on ant assemblages in fens and forestsDIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Issue 6 2005Jaime S. Ratchford ABSTRACT We investigated the effects of the abiotic environment, plant community composition and disturbance by fire on ant assemblages in two distinct habitat types in the Siskiyou Mountains in northern California and southern Oregon, USA. Sampling over 2 years in burned and unburned Darlingtonia fens and their adjacent upland forests, we found that the effects of disturbance by fire depended on habitat type. In forests, fire intensity predicted richness in ant assemblages in both years after the fire, and plant community composition predicted richness 2 years after the fire. No factors were associated with richness in the species-poor fen ant assemblages. Species-specific responses to both habitat type and disturbance by fire were idiosyncratic. Assemblage composition depended on habitat type, but not disturbance by fire, and the composition of each assemblage between years was more dissimilar in burned than unburned sites. [source] Palaeovegetational and palaeoenvironmental trends in the summit of the Guaiquinima massif (Venezuelan Guayana) during the Holocene,JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE, Issue 2 2005Valentí Rull Abstract The summits of the table mountains (tepuis) from the Neotropical Guayana region are remote environments suitable for palaeoecological studies with evolutionary, biogeographical and palaeoclimatic implications. Here, using palynological analyses of two radiocarbon-dated peat bogs from a tepui summit, the Holocene palaeovegetational trends are reconstructed, and related to possible forcing factors. Because of the pristine character of the Guaiquinima summit, the recorded palaeoenvironmental changes are probably due to natural causes, which makes them valuable archives of the natural component of climatic change at a millennial time scale. The sequence begins with pioneer communities or meadows similar to present-day ones, between about 8.4 and 4.5,ky BP. After this date, and until about 2,kyr BP the expansion of gallery forests suggests an increase in precipitation, documented also at regional (Neotropical) level. Between ca. 2,kyr BP and the last century, gallery forests are replaced by forests characteristic of the upper Guaiquinima altitudes, coinciding with a regional phase of reduced moisture. The present-day meadows, established relatively quickly during the last century, substituted the former upland forests. In the locality studied, the main controlling factor of the vegetation during the Holocene seems to have been the moisture balance. In contrast to other tepui summits, there is no clear evidence for changes linked to temperature oscillations. This could be due to the elevation of the site, far from any characteristic ecological boundary, that makes it insensitive to this parameter. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |