Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18833
Title: Responses of seedling transplants to environmental variations in contrasting habitats of Central Amazonia
Authors: Benítez-Malvido, Julieta
Martínez-Ramos, Miguel
Camargo, José Luís Campana
Ferraz, Isolde Dorothea Kossmann
Keywords: Disturbance
Growth
Habitat Type
Herbivory
Photosynthetically Active Radiation
Seedling Establishment
Survival
Transplantation
Tropical Forest
Amazonia
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
Bos Taurus
Chrysophyllum
Chrysophyllum Pomiferum
Insecta
Micropholis (angiosperm)
Micropholis Venulosa
Pouteria
Pouteria Caimito
Sapotaceae
Issue Date: 2005
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Tropical Ecology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 21, Número 4, Pags. 397-406
Abstract: In the Central Amazon we investigated whether seedling performance (survival, and relative growth rates in height and leaf numbers) was affected by initial seedling size (height and leaf numbers) in habitats that varied in their degree of human disturbance: cattle pasture, young secondary forest, 1-ha forest fragment and old-growth forest. Additionally, effects of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), litter standing crop (LSC) and insect herbivory were evaluated 12 mo after transplantation in seedlings from the native canopy trees Chrysophyllum pomiferum, Micropholis venulosa and Pouteria caimito. Seedling performance changed rank across the understorey environment depending on species. Seedlings of Chrysophyllum thrived in all conditions but under high PAR, Micropholis thrived only in intermediate light conditions, whereas Pouteria thrived under high PAR. Effects of initial seedling size, PAR and herbivory after 1 y were specific to species, whereas LSC had no effect on performance. Initially larger seedlings resulted in lower survival for Chrysophyllum and Pouteria. Herbivory affected seedling performance in all species. Negative effects of herbivory were intensified under low PAR. Overall, our results showed that, as seedlings, species of the same family and characteristic of old-growth forests respond differently to the environmental constraints present in contrasting human-disturbed conditions. Larger seedlings may not always present greater tolerance to physical and biotic mortality risks. Copyright © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1017/S0266467405002439
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