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Response of tree species diversity to disturbance in humid tropical forests of Borneo
Author(s) -
Imai Nobuo,
Samejima Hiromitsu,
Demies Malcom,
Tanaka Atsushi,
Sugau John Baptist,
Pereira Joan T.,
Kitayama Kanehiro
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of vegetation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1654-1103
pISSN - 1100-9233
DOI - 10.1111/jvs.12401
Subject(s) - species richness , disturbance (geology) , intermediate disturbance hypothesis , ecology , species diversity , biomass (ecology) , tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests , tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests , forestry , tropics , diversity index , subtropics , environmental science , geography , biology , paleontology
Questions The intermediate disturbance hypothesis ( IDH ) predicts that the highest species diversity occurs at an intermediate level of disturbance. The validity of the IDH remains contentious in tropical forests because the IDH has been supported in tropical dry forests but often not in humid tropical forests. We addressed the following questions: (1) is the IDH valid in humid tropical forests of Borneo; (2) how does the disturbance index ( DI ) influence conformity to the IDH ; and (3) does the rainfall regime influence conformity to the IDH within the tropical biome? Location Humid tropical forests of northern Borneo. Methods We established approximately 50 20‐m radius circular plots across primary to highly degraded forests in each of three logging concessions. Species richness was regressed against the following four DI s: above‐ground biomass ( AGB ), relative number ( RNO ) of pioneer trees, average wood density, and the principal component analysis ( PCA ) axis 1 score for the three DI s. For studies that examined the IDH in tropical forests, the relationship between total and dry season precipitation and the percentage reduction in species diversity from a unimodal maximum to the lowest disturbance level was examined. Results Species richness peaked at intermediate disturbance levels when average wood density and PCA 1 score, but not AGB and pioneer RNO , were used as DI s. The peaks were relatively flat, with 8–11% reduction in species richness from a unimodal maximum to the lowest disturbance level. The percentage reduction in species richness from a unimodal maximum to the lowest disturbance level increased with decreasing total and dry season precipitation within the tropical biome. Conclusion Species richness showed a unimodal response to disturbance, but conformity to the IDH varied with DI because different DI s may have different biological meanings. Species richness changed little from a moderately disturbed to the least disturbed stand in humid tropical forests compared with tropical dry forests, indicating that IDH is dependent on rainfall regime.

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