Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests

We compare level of flowering and fruiting in 55 samples of Neotropical forest understory from 13 sites in 6 countries. Each sample consists of a census of fertile understory plants along a transect. Changes in species richness and density of fertile understory plants are correlated with rainfall and soil fertility. Areas with weak (or no) dry seasons and intermediate to rich soils average 64 fertile plant species and 174 individuals per sample, whereas areas with poor soil and a strong dry season average only 5 fertile species and 8 fertile individuals. Areas with either strong dry seasons and good soils or weak dry seasons and very poor soils have intermediate values. Taxonomic composition of the understory also changes predictably with rainfall and soil fertility. In increasingly stressed forests changes are found in understory structure, with sequential loss of terrestrial herbs, epiphytes, understory shrubs, and lianas. The understory of the poorest soil site consists almost entirely of young trees. The effects of seasonal differences at a given site are small compared with between-site differences. We suggest that the level of understory fertility may provide a simple indicator of overall ecosystem productivity.

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Main Authors: 71310 Gentry, A.H., 64992 Emmons, L.H.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1987
Subjects:DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION, FLORACION, FRUCTIFICACION, FENOLOGIA, BOSQUE TROPICAL,
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record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:578622020-02-03T21:23:46ZGeographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests 71310 Gentry, A.H. 64992 Emmons, L.H. 1987We compare level of flowering and fruiting in 55 samples of Neotropical forest understory from 13 sites in 6 countries. Each sample consists of a census of fertile understory plants along a transect. Changes in species richness and density of fertile understory plants are correlated with rainfall and soil fertility. Areas with weak (or no) dry seasons and intermediate to rich soils average 64 fertile plant species and 174 individuals per sample, whereas areas with poor soil and a strong dry season average only 5 fertile species and 8 fertile individuals. Areas with either strong dry seasons and good soils or weak dry seasons and very poor soils have intermediate values. Taxonomic composition of the understory also changes predictably with rainfall and soil fertility. In increasingly stressed forests changes are found in understory structure, with sequential loss of terrestrial herbs, epiphytes, understory shrubs, and lianas. The understory of the poorest soil site consists almost entirely of young trees. The effects of seasonal differences at a given site are small compared with between-site differences. We suggest that the level of understory fertility may provide a simple indicator of overall ecosystem productivity.We compare level of flowering and fruiting in 55 samples of Neotropical forest understory from 13 sites in 6 countries. Each sample consists of a census of fertile understory plants along a transect. Changes in species richness and density of fertile understory plants are correlated with rainfall and soil fertility. Areas with weak (or no) dry seasons and intermediate to rich soils average 64 fertile plant species and 174 individuals per sample, whereas areas with poor soil and a strong dry season average only 5 fertile species and 8 fertile individuals. Areas with either strong dry seasons and good soils or weak dry seasons and very poor soils have intermediate values. Taxonomic composition of the understory also changes predictably with rainfall and soil fertility. In increasingly stressed forests changes are found in understory structure, with sequential loss of terrestrial herbs, epiphytes, understory shrubs, and lianas. The understory of the poorest soil site consists almost entirely of young trees. The effects of seasonal differences at a given site are small compared with between-site differences. We suggest that the level of understory fertility may provide a simple indicator of overall ecosystem productivity.DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACIONFLORACIONFRUCTIFICACIONFENOLOGIABOSQUE TROPICALBiotrópica (EUA)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION
FLORACION
FRUCTIFICACION
FENOLOGIA
BOSQUE TROPICAL
DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION
FLORACION
FRUCTIFICACION
FENOLOGIA
BOSQUE TROPICAL
spellingShingle DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION
FLORACION
FRUCTIFICACION
FENOLOGIA
BOSQUE TROPICAL
DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION
FLORACION
FRUCTIFICACION
FENOLOGIA
BOSQUE TROPICAL
71310 Gentry, A.H.
64992 Emmons, L.H.
Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
description We compare level of flowering and fruiting in 55 samples of Neotropical forest understory from 13 sites in 6 countries. Each sample consists of a census of fertile understory plants along a transect. Changes in species richness and density of fertile understory plants are correlated with rainfall and soil fertility. Areas with weak (or no) dry seasons and intermediate to rich soils average 64 fertile plant species and 174 individuals per sample, whereas areas with poor soil and a strong dry season average only 5 fertile species and 8 fertile individuals. Areas with either strong dry seasons and good soils or weak dry seasons and very poor soils have intermediate values. Taxonomic composition of the understory also changes predictably with rainfall and soil fertility. In increasingly stressed forests changes are found in understory structure, with sequential loss of terrestrial herbs, epiphytes, understory shrubs, and lianas. The understory of the poorest soil site consists almost entirely of young trees. The effects of seasonal differences at a given site are small compared with between-site differences. We suggest that the level of understory fertility may provide a simple indicator of overall ecosystem productivity.
format
topic_facet DENSIDAD DE LA POBLACION
FLORACION
FRUCTIFICACION
FENOLOGIA
BOSQUE TROPICAL
author 71310 Gentry, A.H.
64992 Emmons, L.H.
author_facet 71310 Gentry, A.H.
64992 Emmons, L.H.
author_sort 71310 Gentry, A.H.
title Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
title_short Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
title_full Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
title_fullStr Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
title_full_unstemmed Geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
title_sort geographical variation in fertility, phenology, and composition of the understory of neotropical forests
publishDate 1987
work_keys_str_mv AT 71310gentryah geographicalvariationinfertilityphenologyandcompositionoftheunderstoryofneotropicalforests
AT 64992emmonslh geographicalvariationinfertilityphenologyandcompositionoftheunderstoryofneotropicalforests
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