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Title: Recovery of a Subtropical Dry Forest After Abandonment of Different Land Uses.
Authors: Colón, Sandra Molina
Lugo, Ariel E.
USDA, FS
Source: Biotropica. 2006 May, v. 38, no. 3 Blackwell Publishing Inc, p. 354-364.
NALT Subjects: tropical forests
forest ecology
land use
forest trees
species diversity
forest stands
stand structure
vegetation structure
density
forest litter
basal area
stemwood
root systems
invasive species
deforestation
reforestation
forest regeneration
ecological restoration
forest succession
anthropogenic activities
Leucaena leucocephala
Puerto Rico
Issue Date: May-2006
Abstract: We studied the ecological characteristics of 45-50-yr-old subtropical dry forest stands in Puerto Rico that were growing on sites that had been deforested and used intensively for up to 128 yr. The study took place in the Guánica Commonwealth Forest. Our objective was to assess the long-term effects of previous land use on this forest - - i.e., its species composition, structure, and functioning. Previous land-use types included houses, farmlands, and charcoal pits. Stands with these land uses were compared with a nearby mature forest stand. The speed and path of forest recovery after deforestation and land-use abandonment depended on the conditions of the land. Study areas where land uses had removed the forest canopy and altered soil conditions (houses and farmlands) required a longer time to recover and had a different species composition than study areas where land uses retained a forest canopy (charcoal pits). Different forest attributes recovered at different rates. Crown area index, stem density, and litterfall rate recovered faster than stemwood and root, biomass, tree height, and basal area. Where previous land uses removed the canopy, Leucaena leucocephala, a naturalized alien pioneer species, dominated the regrowth. Native species dominated abandoned charcoal pits and mature forest. The change in species composition, including the invasion of alien species, appears to be the most significant long-term effect of human use and modification of the landscape.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/28130
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND43796270.pdf348KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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