Logo image
Structure and floristics of secondary and old-growth forest stands in lowland Costa Rica
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Structure and floristics of secondary and old-growth forest stands in lowland Costa Rica

M R Guariguata, Robin L Chazdon, J S Denslow, J M Dupuy and L Anderson
Plant Ecology, Vol.132(1), pp.107-120
1997
url
https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009726421352View
Published Version

Abstract

secondary forest species diversity stand structure succession tropical rain forest
We characterized stand structure and floristic composition of woody life forms in three, 16-18 yr old secondary stands that regenerated after pasture abandonment, and three nearby old-growth stands of tropical rain forest in lowland Costa Rica. Basal area and stem density for each of four plant size classes (seedlings, saplings, treelets, trees) were similar among stand types, but density of adult canopy palms (individuals ≤ 10 cm DBH), was lower in the secondary stands. We estimate that 15% of the basal area of stems ≤ 10 cm DBH correspond to remnant trees in our secondary stands. The observed rapid woody regrowth compared to other published studies in the lowland neotropics, can be attributed to moderate land use and possibly, to the influence of nutrient-rich volcanic soils in the study area. Overall, plant species richness was lower in the secondary stands, but this difference was less pronounced in the smallest size classes (seedlings, saplings). Median percent similarity of all pairwise stand comparisons showed that floristic composition of saplings (stems ≤ 1 m tall and ≤ 5 cm DBH) was more similar between secondary and old-growth stands than for trees (stems ≤ 10 cm DBH). Because the potential value of secondary forests in conserving woody plant diversity appears highest for the young size classes, we suggest that further studies on floristic composition, especially those addressing the dynamics of the understory component, are needed to refine our understanding of the role of this natural resource in the maintenance of plant biodiversity in disturbed landscapes.

Details

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Web Of Science research areas
Ecology
Forestry
Plant Sciences

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

Logo image