Facilitation and edge effects influence vegetation regeneration in old-fields at the tropical Andean forest line
Resumo
Questions: Do local plant-plant interactions and facilitation play an important role in vegetation dynamics after disturbance in the high tropical Andes? In particular, does the dominant shrub Baccharis prunifolia have an effect on microclimate and local vegetation structure within old-fields at the upper forest line? Does distance from the border of the surrounding forests also influence community structure within fallow plots? Is there an interaction between facilitation
and edge effects on vegetation regeneration?
Location: Gavidia Valley, Sierra Nevada de Mérida, Venezuela.
Methods: Plant cover, species richness and community structure were compared
in circularmicro-plots placed under the canopy of B. prunifolia shrubs and
in open areas (12micro-plots in each case) both near and far fromthe forest border
within two 10-12 yr successional plots at 3400 m a.s.l. (a total of 96 micro-plots). Additionally, topsoil temperature was monitored for 1 mo in the four situations under study.
Results: Average and maximum temperature and temperature amplitudes were lower under the canopy of B. prunifolia shrubs than in open areas; this effect being more marked far from the forest edge. Species richness, vegetation
cover and the density of dominant forest trees were higher under the shrubs’
canopy than in the inter-shrub spaces. The proximity to the edge of the surrounding
forest also had a positive effect on species richness, with no significant
interaction with the local sampling situation (under shrub vs outside).
Conclusions: Our results suggest that both facilitation and edge effects influence
the effectiveness of vegetation regeneration within old-fields in the high
tropical Andes. Consequently, these processes should be considered for interpreting
vegetation dynamics in environmental change scenarios at the tropical
mountain tree line and for the design of ecological restoration strategies in these
high-diversity ecotones, which have been subjected to large-scale anthropogenic
transformations in recent decades.
Colecciones
Información Adicional
Correo Electrónico | abuenog@gmail.com llambi@ula.ve |
Descripción | Applied Vegetation Science 18 (2015) 613-623 |
Colación | 613-623 |
País | Alemania |
Institución | Universidad de Los Andes |