Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges

Approximately 7.2% of the Atlantic rainforest remains in Brazil, with only 16% of this forest remaining in the State of Rio de Janeiro, all of it distributed in fragments. This forest fragmentation can produce biotic and abiotic differences between edges and the fragment interior. In this study, we compared the structure and richness of tree communities in three habitats - an anthropogenic edge (AE), a natural edge (NE) and the fragment interior (FI) - of a fragment of Atlantic forest in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (22°50'S and 42°28'W). One thousand and seventy-six trees with a diameter at breast height > 4.8 cm, belonging to 132 morphospecies and 39 families, were sampled in a total study area of 0.75 ha. NE had the greatest basal area and the trees in this habitat had the greatest diameter:height allometric coefficient, whereas AE had a lower richness and greater variation in the height of the first tree branch. Tree density, diameter, height and the proportion of standing dead trees did not differ among the habitats. There was marked heterogeneity among replicates within each habitat. These results indicate that the forest interior and the fragment edges (natural or anthropogenic) do not differ markedly considering the studied parameters. Other factors, such as the age from the edge, type of matrix and proximity of gaps, may play a more important role in plant community structure than the proximity from edges.

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Main Authors: Ribeiro,Maíra Taquiguthi, Ramos,Flavio Nunes, Santos,Flavio Antonio Maës Dos
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade de Investigações Florestais 2009
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-67622009000600014
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spelling oai:scielo:S0100-676220090006000142010-03-09Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edgesRibeiro,Maíra TaquiguthiRamos,Flavio NunesSantos,Flavio Antonio Maës Dos Forest fragmentation Natural edge Vegetation structure Approximately 7.2% of the Atlantic rainforest remains in Brazil, with only 16% of this forest remaining in the State of Rio de Janeiro, all of it distributed in fragments. This forest fragmentation can produce biotic and abiotic differences between edges and the fragment interior. In this study, we compared the structure and richness of tree communities in three habitats - an anthropogenic edge (AE), a natural edge (NE) and the fragment interior (FI) - of a fragment of Atlantic forest in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (22°50'S and 42°28'W). One thousand and seventy-six trees with a diameter at breast height > 4.8 cm, belonging to 132 morphospecies and 39 families, were sampled in a total study area of 0.75 ha. NE had the greatest basal area and the trees in this habitat had the greatest diameter:height allometric coefficient, whereas AE had a lower richness and greater variation in the height of the first tree branch. Tree density, diameter, height and the proportion of standing dead trees did not differ among the habitats. There was marked heterogeneity among replicates within each habitat. These results indicate that the forest interior and the fragment edges (natural or anthropogenic) do not differ markedly considering the studied parameters. Other factors, such as the age from the edge, type of matrix and proximity of gaps, may play a more important role in plant community structure than the proximity from edges.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade de Investigações FlorestaisRevista Árvore v.33 n.6 20092009-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-67622009000600014en10.1590/S0100-67622009000600014
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Ribeiro,Maíra Taquiguthi
Ramos,Flavio Nunes
Santos,Flavio Antonio Maës Dos
spellingShingle Ribeiro,Maíra Taquiguthi
Ramos,Flavio Nunes
Santos,Flavio Antonio Maës Dos
Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
author_facet Ribeiro,Maíra Taquiguthi
Ramos,Flavio Nunes
Santos,Flavio Antonio Maës Dos
author_sort Ribeiro,Maíra Taquiguthi
title Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
title_short Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
title_full Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
title_fullStr Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
title_full_unstemmed Tree structure and richness in an Atlantic Forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
title_sort tree structure and richness in an atlantic forest fragment: distance from anthropogenic and natural edges
description Approximately 7.2% of the Atlantic rainforest remains in Brazil, with only 16% of this forest remaining in the State of Rio de Janeiro, all of it distributed in fragments. This forest fragmentation can produce biotic and abiotic differences between edges and the fragment interior. In this study, we compared the structure and richness of tree communities in three habitats - an anthropogenic edge (AE), a natural edge (NE) and the fragment interior (FI) - of a fragment of Atlantic forest in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (22°50'S and 42°28'W). One thousand and seventy-six trees with a diameter at breast height > 4.8 cm, belonging to 132 morphospecies and 39 families, were sampled in a total study area of 0.75 ha. NE had the greatest basal area and the trees in this habitat had the greatest diameter:height allometric coefficient, whereas AE had a lower richness and greater variation in the height of the first tree branch. Tree density, diameter, height and the proportion of standing dead trees did not differ among the habitats. There was marked heterogeneity among replicates within each habitat. These results indicate that the forest interior and the fragment edges (natural or anthropogenic) do not differ markedly considering the studied parameters. Other factors, such as the age from the edge, type of matrix and proximity of gaps, may play a more important role in plant community structure than the proximity from edges.
publisher Sociedade de Investigações Florestais
publishDate 2009
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-67622009000600014
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AT santosflavioantoniomaesdos treestructureandrichnessinanatlanticforestfragmentdistancefromanthropogenicandnaturaledges
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