scholarly journals Asignación de recursos e influencia de los cotiledones en el crecimiento de plántulasde Nectandra ambigens (Blake) C. K. Allen (Lauraceae) en una selva tropical húmeda

2017 ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Guadalupe Barajas-Guzmán ◽  
Javier Álvarez-Sánchez

In the tropical rain forest, those species having cotyledons, endosperm, or both, which function as storage of parental resources, have a higher probability of surviving as part of the regeneration process. In this study, the influence of cotyledons on the growth of Nectandra ambigens seedlings was analyzed, as well as patterns of resource allocation to shoot, roots and leaves. After germination, seeds where grown under the forest canopy. Five surveys were made at two month intervals. The seedling and cotyledon biomass were significantly different along the time. A negative and significant correlation between cotyledon and seedling biomass was observed. An increase in photosynthetic biomass was measured getting resource from stem biomass and not from roots. This study shows the dependence of Nectandra ambigens seedlings on parental resources for the initial 250 days, which makes them successful in persisting on the forest floor and becoming part of the advanced regeneration.

2017 ◽  
pp. 179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Martínez-Ramos

One of the major biological mysteries still to be explained is the maintenance of the enormous local tree species diversity in tropical rain forests .This review explores the relationship between the dynamics of natural regeneration and the evolutionary and ecological processes and mechanisms involved in the origin and maintenance of such extraordinary diversity. First, 1 review ideas on the origin of tree species diversity in the tropics. This review suggests that: i) historical, evolutionary and biogeographical phenomena have a paramount influence on local species richness, and ii) tropical rain forest tree communities are species unsaturated, suggesting that newly originated species may freely migrate across a regional landscape. Second, I describe the forest regeneration process. Gap dynamics, promoted by branch and tree falls, is a fundamental component of the forest canopy renewal. Small gaps (caused by branch falls) facilitate the establishment and survival of seedlings and saplings in the shaded understory (advanced regeneration), whereas large gaps (caused by tree falls) enable trees to reach mature sizes. Gap creation and tree maturation are the extremes of a process of tree and species replacement in the forest canopy. Third, I explore relationships between the tree replacement process and the population and community mechanisms that facilitate maintenance of species diversity at a local scale of a few hectares. I argue and document that factors that promote high species diversity in the advanced regeneration favor high probabilities of heterospecific replacements among canopy trees. Hence, these factors facilitate the maintenance of species diversity in the forest canopy. Frugivores, by promoting diversity in the seed rain community, and biotic agents of seed, seedling and sapling mortality by operating mainly on abundant species, are key factors in facilitating diversity. Furthermore, the existence of trade offs in tree life history attributes (such as seed dispersal capacity, survivorship in the shade and growth under gap conditions) contributes to diversity maintenance by promoting heterospecific replacements. This review does not support ú1e idea that maintenance of tree species diversity in tropical rain forest depends on random processes, as some authors have claimed. instead, I conclude that ecological phenomena have a paran1ounl role on the possibility that a species gains a membresy in such highly diverse forests.


2011 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
James S. Pryke ◽  
Sven M. Vrdoljak ◽  
Paul B. C. Grant ◽  
Michael J. Samways

Abstract:Natural tree canopy gaps allow sunlight to penetrate to the forest floor, a major environmental component and resource for many tropical rain-forest species. We compare here how butterflies use sunny areas created by the natural gaps in canopies in comparison with adjacent closed-canopy areas. We chose butterflies as our focal organisms as they are taxonomically tractable and mobile, yet habitat sensitive. Previous studies have shown that butterfly diversity in tropical forests responds to varying degrees of canopy openness. Here we assess butterfly behavioural responses to gaps and equivalent sized closed-canopy patches. Butterfly occupancy time and behaviour were simultaneously observed 61 times in gaps and 61 times in equivalent sized closed-canopy patches across four sites in a tropical rain forest in northern Borneo. Out of the 20 most frequently recorded species, 12 were more frequently recorded or spent more time in gaps, four occurred more frequently in closed-canopy areas, and four showed no significant differences. Overall agonistic, basking, patrolling and resting were more common in gaps compared with the closed canopy. Many butterfly species have complex behavioural requirements for both gaps and closed canopies, with some species using these different areas for different behaviours. Each butterfly species had particular habitat requirements, and needed both canopy gaps and closed canopy areas for ecological and behavioural reasons, emphasizing the need for natural light heterogeneity within these systems.


Biotropica ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald R. Perry ◽  
John Williams

Ecology ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 585-597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley R. Herwitz ◽  
Robert E. Slye ◽  
Stephen M. Turton

Tropics ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erizal MUKHTAR ◽  
Eizi SUZUKI ◽  
Takashi KOHYAMA ◽  
Marlis RAHMAN

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