Title
Response of forest tree saplings to experimental mechanical damage in lowland Panama
Date Issued
23 March 1998
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Ctro. Agronomico Trop. de Invest.
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
Physical damage to saplings is considered an important factor that affects tree population dynamics in tropical forests, but interspecific differences in post-damage vegetative recovery and survival have been rarely quantified. Over 4 years, the vegetative and demographic responses to experimental mechanical damage were monitored in naturally-growing saplings of four coexisting tree species, under comparable overhead illumination conditions, in a lowland moist forest in Central Panama. Inflicted damage mimicked both crown loss and stem breakage ('snapped') and stem pinning by fallen debris ('bent') in individuals (1.0-2.5 m tall) of Alseis blackiana (Rubiaceae), Protium panamense, P. tenuifolium, and Tetragastris panamensis (all Burseraceae). For all species combined, 4-year percent mortality was significantly different between bent (21%), snapped (13%), and undamaged controls (6%). Species differed in their capacity to survive damage. Saplings of A. blackiana showed the highest resilience, expressed as a high ability to regain pre-damage height in snapped individuals, production of adventitious roots in bent individuals, and very high survival. A previous classification of the study species fit them into a large 'generalist' guild, after no illumination preferences were obvious for their juvenile growth and survival at the study site. In contrast, this study suggests that tree vegetative behavior should be incorporated in future tropical forest research that attempts to detect species differentiation in regeneration potential at the sapling phase.
Start page
103
End page
111
Volume
102
Issue
March 2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias de las plantas, Botánica
Conservación de la Biodiversidad
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0032559858
Source
Forest Ecology and Management
ISSN of the container
03781127
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by a Pre-doctoral Fellowship from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama, and by the Yale School of Forestry, and represents a portion of a doctoral dissertation submitted to Yale University. I thank K. Vogt, G. Berlyn, the late A.P. Smith, and D.M. Smith for advice. P. Angulo, L. Schneider, B. Engelbrecht, and R. Racines helped with fieldwork. J. Putz, D.A. Clark, and D.B. Clark commented on previous versions of the manuscript. This paper is dedicated to the memory of R. Guariguata.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus