Recovery of the rain forest of southeastern Nicaragua after destruction by hurricane Joan

Hurricane Joan badly damaged the rain forest of southeastern Nicaragua in October 1989, toppling or snapping off 80 percent of the trees and completely destroying the canopy over an area of 500.000 ha. An international expedition to the area in February 1989 found and unexpected pattern of recovery, with a large majority of damaged trees resprouting. Regeneration is dominated by sprouts and seedlings of primary forest species, rather than secondary pioneers. Little or no reduction in tree species richness has occurred, although bird and bat populations seem to have decreased considerably. The "direct regeneration" observed after this large disturbance of primary forest, challenges previous views of both the pattern of secondary succession and the nature of primary rain forest.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 132566 Yih, K., 50417 Boucher, D.H., 127342 Vandermeer, J.H., 132982 Zamora, N.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1991
Subjects:FENOMENOS ATMOSFERICOS, DAÑOS, MORTALIDAD, REHABILITACION DE TIERRAS, NICARAGUA,
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