Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18322
Title: Effects of forest fragmentation on the seedling recruitment of a tropical herb: Assessing seed vs. safe-site limitation
Authors: Uríarte, Ma?ia
Bruna, Emilio M.
Rubim, Paulo
Anciães, Marina
Jonckheere, Inge G.C.
Keywords: Anthropogenic Effect
Forest Ecosystem
Functional Group
Habitat Fragmentation
Landscape Change
Monocotyledon
Pollinator
Recruitment (population Dynamics)
Seed Production
Seedling Establishment
Tropical Forest
Understory
Biological Model
Demography
Ecosystem
Energy Conservation
Heliconiaceae
Physiology
Seed Plant
Seedling
Tree
Conservation Of Energy Resources
Demography
Ecosystem
Heliconiaceae
Models, Biological
Seedling
Seeds
Trees
Amazonia
Heliconia Acuminata
Issue Date: 2010
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Ecology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 91, Número 5, Pags. 1317-1328
Abstract: Studies simultaneously evaluating the importance of safe-site and seed limitation for plant establishment are rare, particularly in human-modified landscapes. We used spatially explicit neighborhood models together with data from 10 0.5-ha mapped census plots in a fragmented landscape spanning 1000 km2 to (1) evaluate the relative importance of seed production, dispersal, and safe-site limitation for the recruitment of the understory herb Heliconia acuminata; and (2) determine how these processes differ between fragments and continuous forests. Our analyses demonstrated a large degree of variation in seed production, dispersal, and establishment among and within the 10 study plots. Seed production limitation was strong but only at small spatial scales. Average dispersal distance was less than 4 m, leading to severe dispersal limitation at most sites. Overall, safe-site limitation was the most important constraint on seedling establishment. Fragmentation led to a more heterogeneous light environment with negative consequences for seedling establishment but had little effect on seed production or dispersal. These results suggest that the effects of fragmentation on abiotic processes may be more important than the disruption of biotic interactions in driving biodiversity loss in tropical forests, at least for some functional groups. These effects may be common when the matrix surrounding fragments contains enough tree cover to enable movement of dispersere and pollinators. © 2010 by the Ecological Society of America.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1890/09-0785.1
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