Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18432
Title: Habitat fragmentation and plant populations: Is what we know demographically irrelevant?
Authors: Bruna, Emilio M.
Fiske, Ian J.
Trager Matthew, D.
Keywords: Demographic Survey
Fertility
Habitat Fragmentation
Life History
Pollination
Population Decline
Recruitment (population Dynamics)
Reproduction
Seed Bank
Seedling Emergence
Survivorship
Issue Date: 2009
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Vegetation Science
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 20, Número 3, Pags. 569-576
Abstract: Habitat fragmentation is considered a leading cause of plant extinction, and matrix models provide a powerful set of tools with which to identifying mechanisms that influence population declines. We surveyed the ecological literature to determine what components of plant demography have been studied in fragmented habitats, and determined the elasticity values of the vital rates influenced by these components. We found that there is a major disparity between the ecological processes and stages of life history with large demographic impacts and the focus of empirical research on plants in fragmented habitats. While the growth and survivorship of large, established individuals have the highest elasticity values, the focus of empirical research has been on components of reproduction and seedling dynamics. We argue that elucidating the demographic mechanisms underlying population declines in fragmented habitats, and developing strategies for mitigating these declines, will be challenging without a greater focus on understanding how fragmentation alters adult plant growth and survivorship.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2009.01060.x
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