Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico

We studied succession over five years in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico, following three different types of experimental disturbance (slashing and complete felling; slashing, felling and burning; and machine-clearing), each one implemented in 1996 on two 0.5 ha treatment plots. Before experimental disturbances, the floristic composition, dominance and diversity of the forest vegetation had been determined. In 1997, after treatments were applied, a second survey characterized early secondary vegetation at one year. A third survey was conducted in 2001. The 1996 vegetation composition revealed no significant differences among the six treatment plots. In 1997, floristic composition on the six treatment plots showed differences in dominance and diversity: the post-treatment vegetation on the slash/fell treatment was clearly distinct from that on the other two treatments. In 2001, differences among the plots had decreased considerably. Comparisons among seral stages revealed that one-year-old secondary vegetation differed from the pre-disturbance original vegetation, while five-year-old vegetation was similar to the original in its diversity, floristic composition and dominance. Felling alone favors species with a high resprouting capacity. The frequency of species with resprouting capacity was lower on slash/fell/burn treatments and lowest on machine-cleared plots. Results indicate that the effect of disturbance tends to decline over time and that complete clearing of small areas is effective as a silvicultural treatment to favor regeneration of valuable timber species and sustain diversity.

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Main Authors: Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329, Sánchez Sánchez, Odilón Manuel Doctor autor/a 2034, Islebe, Gerald A. Doctor autor/a 2046, Snook, Laura K. autor/a 15208, Negreros Castillo, Patricia Doctora autor/a 22532
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Regeneración forestal, Composición botánica, Bosques tropicales secos, Disturbio ecológico, Economía forestal, Artfrosur,
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:91042024-03-12T12:41:12ZRecovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329 Sánchez Sánchez, Odilón Manuel Doctor autor/a 2034 Islebe, Gerald A. Doctor autor/a 2046 Snook, Laura K. autor/a 15208 Negreros Castillo, Patricia Doctora autor/a 22532 textengWe studied succession over five years in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico, following three different types of experimental disturbance (slashing and complete felling; slashing, felling and burning; and machine-clearing), each one implemented in 1996 on two 0.5 ha treatment plots. Before experimental disturbances, the floristic composition, dominance and diversity of the forest vegetation had been determined. In 1997, after treatments were applied, a second survey characterized early secondary vegetation at one year. A third survey was conducted in 2001. The 1996 vegetation composition revealed no significant differences among the six treatment plots. In 1997, floristic composition on the six treatment plots showed differences in dominance and diversity: the post-treatment vegetation on the slash/fell treatment was clearly distinct from that on the other two treatments. In 2001, differences among the plots had decreased considerably. Comparisons among seral stages revealed that one-year-old secondary vegetation differed from the pre-disturbance original vegetation, while five-year-old vegetation was similar to the original in its diversity, floristic composition and dominance. Felling alone favors species with a high resprouting capacity. The frequency of species with resprouting capacity was lower on slash/fell/burn treatments and lowest on machine-cleared plots. Results indicate that the effect of disturbance tends to decline over time and that complete clearing of small areas is effective as a silvicultural treatment to favor regeneration of valuable timber species and sustain diversity.We studied succession over five years in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico, following three different types of experimental disturbance (slashing and complete felling; slashing, felling and burning; and machine-clearing), each one implemented in 1996 on two 0.5 ha treatment plots. Before experimental disturbances, the floristic composition, dominance and diversity of the forest vegetation had been determined. In 1997, after treatments were applied, a second survey characterized early secondary vegetation at one year. A third survey was conducted in 2001. The 1996 vegetation composition revealed no significant differences among the six treatment plots. In 1997, floristic composition on the six treatment plots showed differences in dominance and diversity: the post-treatment vegetation on the slash/fell treatment was clearly distinct from that on the other two treatments. In 2001, differences among the plots had decreased considerably. Comparisons among seral stages revealed that one-year-old secondary vegetation differed from the pre-disturbance original vegetation, while five-year-old vegetation was similar to the original in its diversity, floristic composition and dominance. Felling alone favors species with a high resprouting capacity. The frequency of species with resprouting capacity was lower on slash/fell/burn treatments and lowest on machine-cleared plots. Results indicate that the effect of disturbance tends to decline over time and that complete clearing of small areas is effective as a silvicultural treatment to favor regeneration of valuable timber species and sustain diversity.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorRegeneración forestalComposición botánicaBosques tropicales secosDisturbio ecológicoEconomía forestalArtfrosurDisponible en líneaForest Ecology and ManagementDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Regeneración forestal
Composición botánica
Bosques tropicales secos
Disturbio ecológico
Economía forestal
Artfrosur
Regeneración forestal
Composición botánica
Bosques tropicales secos
Disturbio ecológico
Economía forestal
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Regeneración forestal
Composición botánica
Bosques tropicales secos
Disturbio ecológico
Economía forestal
Artfrosur
Regeneración forestal
Composición botánica
Bosques tropicales secos
Disturbio ecológico
Economía forestal
Artfrosur
Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329
Sánchez Sánchez, Odilón Manuel Doctor autor/a 2034
Islebe, Gerald A. Doctor autor/a 2046
Snook, Laura K. autor/a 15208
Negreros Castillo, Patricia Doctora autor/a 22532
Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
description We studied succession over five years in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico, following three different types of experimental disturbance (slashing and complete felling; slashing, felling and burning; and machine-clearing), each one implemented in 1996 on two 0.5 ha treatment plots. Before experimental disturbances, the floristic composition, dominance and diversity of the forest vegetation had been determined. In 1997, after treatments were applied, a second survey characterized early secondary vegetation at one year. A third survey was conducted in 2001. The 1996 vegetation composition revealed no significant differences among the six treatment plots. In 1997, floristic composition on the six treatment plots showed differences in dominance and diversity: the post-treatment vegetation on the slash/fell treatment was clearly distinct from that on the other two treatments. In 2001, differences among the plots had decreased considerably. Comparisons among seral stages revealed that one-year-old secondary vegetation differed from the pre-disturbance original vegetation, while five-year-old vegetation was similar to the original in its diversity, floristic composition and dominance. Felling alone favors species with a high resprouting capacity. The frequency of species with resprouting capacity was lower on slash/fell/burn treatments and lowest on machine-cleared plots. Results indicate that the effect of disturbance tends to decline over time and that complete clearing of small areas is effective as a silvicultural treatment to favor regeneration of valuable timber species and sustain diversity.
format Texto
topic_facet Regeneración forestal
Composición botánica
Bosques tropicales secos
Disturbio ecológico
Economía forestal
Artfrosur
author Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329
Sánchez Sánchez, Odilón Manuel Doctor autor/a 2034
Islebe, Gerald A. Doctor autor/a 2046
Snook, Laura K. autor/a 15208
Negreros Castillo, Patricia Doctora autor/a 22532
author_facet Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329
Sánchez Sánchez, Odilón Manuel Doctor autor/a 2034
Islebe, Gerald A. Doctor autor/a 2046
Snook, Laura K. autor/a 15208
Negreros Castillo, Patricia Doctora autor/a 22532
author_sort Valdéz Hernández, Mirna Doctora 12329
title Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
title_short Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
title_full Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
title_fullStr Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Mexico
title_sort recovery and early succession after experimental disturbance in a seasonally dry tropical forest in mexico
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