Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity

Negative density-dependent relationships in plant communities are currently claimed as an important mechanism for the maintenance of plant diversity. However, anthropogenic perturbations such as forest fragmentation might modify such relationships. We evaluated density-dependent relationships between seed and seedling abundance of a tree assemblage in a fragmented forest for estimating seed-to-seedling transitions and their effects on seedling richness. In continuous forest, two out of four and one out of four species presented significant or a tendency to exhibit negative seedling recruitment which is in agreement with other temperate and tropical forests. In forest fragments (1-6 ha), however, this relationship was uncoupled. Seedling richness and diversity, assessed through Shannon-Wiener Index, did not differ between both types of sites. Therefore, forest fragmentation negatively affected seedling recruitment by uncoupling seed-to-seedling transitions, but not by diminishing seedling diversity. This leads to considering the role of density-dependent relationships for the maintenance of plant diversity in communities and claims for including forest fragments into conservation programmes.

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Main Authors: VALDIVIA,CARLOS E, SIMONETTI,JAVIER A
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedad de Biología de Chile 2011
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2011000200012
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spelling oai:scielo:S0716-078X20110002000122011-09-13Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversityVALDIVIA,CARLOS ESIMONETTI,JAVIER A density-dependent recruitment diversity forest fragmentation seedlings seeds Negative density-dependent relationships in plant communities are currently claimed as an important mechanism for the maintenance of plant diversity. However, anthropogenic perturbations such as forest fragmentation might modify such relationships. We evaluated density-dependent relationships between seed and seedling abundance of a tree assemblage in a fragmented forest for estimating seed-to-seedling transitions and their effects on seedling richness. In continuous forest, two out of four and one out of four species presented significant or a tendency to exhibit negative seedling recruitment which is in agreement with other temperate and tropical forests. In forest fragments (1-6 ha), however, this relationship was uncoupled. Seedling richness and diversity, assessed through Shannon-Wiener Index, did not differ between both types of sites. Therefore, forest fragmentation negatively affected seedling recruitment by uncoupling seed-to-seedling transitions, but not by diminishing seedling diversity. This leads to considering the role of density-dependent relationships for the maintenance of plant diversity in communities and claims for including forest fragments into conservation programmes.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad de Biología de ChileRevista chilena de historia natural v.84 n.2 20112011-06-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2011000200012en10.4067/S0716-078X2011000200012
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-cl
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author VALDIVIA,CARLOS E
SIMONETTI,JAVIER A
spellingShingle VALDIVIA,CARLOS E
SIMONETTI,JAVIER A
Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
author_facet VALDIVIA,CARLOS E
SIMONETTI,JAVIER A
author_sort VALDIVIA,CARLOS E
title Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
title_short Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
title_full Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
title_fullStr Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
title_full_unstemmed Denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
title_sort denied density-dependent seedling recruitment in a fragmented forest does not decrease seedling diversity
description Negative density-dependent relationships in plant communities are currently claimed as an important mechanism for the maintenance of plant diversity. However, anthropogenic perturbations such as forest fragmentation might modify such relationships. We evaluated density-dependent relationships between seed and seedling abundance of a tree assemblage in a fragmented forest for estimating seed-to-seedling transitions and their effects on seedling richness. In continuous forest, two out of four and one out of four species presented significant or a tendency to exhibit negative seedling recruitment which is in agreement with other temperate and tropical forests. In forest fragments (1-6 ha), however, this relationship was uncoupled. Seedling richness and diversity, assessed through Shannon-Wiener Index, did not differ between both types of sites. Therefore, forest fragmentation negatively affected seedling recruitment by uncoupling seed-to-seedling transitions, but not by diminishing seedling diversity. This leads to considering the role of density-dependent relationships for the maintenance of plant diversity in communities and claims for including forest fragments into conservation programmes.
publisher Sociedad de Biología de Chile
publishDate 2011
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2011000200012
work_keys_str_mv AT valdiviacarlose denieddensitydependentseedlingrecruitmentinafragmentedforestdoesnotdecreaseseedlingdiversity
AT simonettijaviera denieddensitydependentseedlingrecruitmentinafragmentedforestdoesnotdecreaseseedlingdiversity
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