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Tree Regeneration and Understory Woody Plants Show Diverse Responses to Forest–Pasture Edges in Costa Rica
Author(s) -
Bouroncle Claudia,
Finegan Bryan
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
biotropica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.813
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1744-7429
pISSN - 0006-3606
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2011.00750.x
Subject(s) - liana , understory , forestry , abundance (ecology) , canopy , geography , vegetation (pathology) , pasture , ecology , secondary forest , agroforestry , biology , medicine , pathology
Edge effects along tropical forest–pasture margins are thought to cause a shift toward early successional characteristics of the understory forest vegetation. We tested this idea by sampling vegetation at five forest sites in northeast Costa Rica each of which had edges that were established over 20 yr earlier. Four of these sites had been selectively logged. We sampled woody plants >0.2 and ≤1.3 m height in 54 m 2 within 0.2 ha plots at edges ( N =14), and at 150 m ( N =11) and 300 m from edges ( N =9). Composition and diversity did not vary with edge distance. Abundance of tree regeneration, mainly of canopy and emergent species, increased at edges. Abundance of lianas and slow‐growing tree species did not differ significantly across the sampling locations. Weighted mean wood density varied little, with a reduction at edges for canopy species. Palms were less abundant at edges, but not less species rich. At edges, these plant assemblages maintain many of the characteristics of forest interior vegetation, though the changes observed may indicate ongoing functional change. Degradation of forest–pasture edges is not a universal feature of tropical forest fragmentation, and forests with high rates of natural turnover might have a high capacity to maintain themselves within forest edges alongside pasture.

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