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Effects of climate and stand age on annual tree dynamics in tropical second-growth rain forests
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Effects of climate and stand age on annual tree dynamics in tropical second-growth rain forests

Robin L Chazdon, A R Brenes and B V Alvarado
Ecology, Vol.86(7), pp.1808-1815
2005
url
https://doi.org/10.1890/04-0572View
Published Version

Abstract

dry-season drought El NinËœo Southern Oscillation (ENSO) forest dynamics mortality rainfall recruitment succession
We monitored mortality and recruitment annually for six years for all trees ≥5 cm diameter at breast height in four 1-ha plots in second-growth, lowland rain forests in northeastern Costa Rica. Stands initially ranged in age from 12 to 25 years since abandonment of cattle pastures. In younger stands, abundance decreased 10-20% in the small size class (5-9.9 cm dbh), but increased 49-100% in the large size class (≥25 cm dbh). In the two youngest plots, 45.0% and 27.6% of the common tree species showed annual population increases of 3% or more, whereas 10% showed annual decreases of 4% or more. Annual rates of tree mortality for all size classes and recruitment into the 5-cm size class varied significantly among years, and mortality rates of trees 5-9.9 cm dbh were higher in younger than in older stands. Tree mortality was highest during the 1997-1998 El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) year; on average, 5.6%, 3.5%, and 1.4% of trees died in the small, intermediate, and large size classes, respectively. Mortality rates during the ENSO year were 1.9 times higher for trees ≥10 cm dbh compared to non-ENSO years. Annual mortality rates for trees ≥10 cm dbh decreased significantly with increasing dry-season rainfall, but not with total annual rainfall during the census periods. Tree mortality (particularly for trees ≥25 cm dbh) in these secondary forests was highly sensitive to dry-season rainfall, even during non-ENSO years. Increased tree mortality during ENSO years is likely to accelerate forest dynamics and successional change in wet tropical second-growth forests. © 2005 by the Ecological Society of America.

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