Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17467
Title: Tree Regeneration Under Different Land-Use Mosaics in the Brazilian Amazon’s “Arc of Deforestation”
Authors: Vale, Igor do
Miranda, Izildinha Souza
Mitja, Danielle
Grimaldi, Michel
Nelson, Bruce Walker
Desjardins, Thierry
Costa, Luiz Gonzaga Silva
Keywords: Agriculture
Biodiversity
Conservation
Deforestation
Forestry
Reforestation
Soil Surveys
Soils
Structure (composition)
Agricultural Areas
Different Land Use Types
Jaccard Similarity Coefficients
Land Use Type
Landscape
Number Of Species
Soil Characteristics
Tree Regeneration
Land Use
Soil
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Environmental Protection
Forest
Growth, Development And Aging
Human
Physiology
Procedures
Regeneration
River
Soil
Tree
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Conservation Of Natural Resources
Forests
Humans
Regeneration
Rivers
Soil
Trees
Issue Date: 2015
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Environmental Management
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 56, Número 2, Pags. 342-354
Abstract: We studied the tree-regeneration patterns in three distinct agricultural settlements in the Eastern Amazon to test the influence of land-use mosaics. The following questions are addressed: are the floristic structure and composition of regenerating trees affected by the various land-use types applied in the agricultural settlements? Do tree-regeneration patterns respond similarly to distinct land-use mosaics? Is there a relationship between tree regeneration and soil characteristics among the land-use types? The regeneration was inventoried at 45 sampling points in each settlement. At each sampling point, fourteen soil variables were analyzed. Nine different land-use types were considered. The floristic structure and composition of the settlements showed differences in the density of individuals and species and high species heterogeneity among the land-use types. The maximum Jaccard similarity coefficient found between land-use types was only 29 %. Shade-tolerant species were the most diverse functional group in most land-use types, including pasture and annual crops, ranging from 91 % of the number of species in the conserved and exploited forests of Travessão 338-S to 53 % in the invaded pastures of Maçaranduba. The land-use types influenced significantly the floristic structure and composition of regenerating trees in two agricultural settlements, but not in third the settlement, which had greater forest cover. This finding demonstrates that the composition of each land-use mosaic, established by different management approaches, affects regeneration patterns. Tree regeneration was related to soil characteristics in all mosaics. Preparation of the area by burning was most likely the determining factor in the differences in soil characteristics between forests and agricultural areas. © 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1007/s00267-015-0500-6
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