Diversity and composition of tropical forest plant communities in the Golfo Dulce region

 

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Autoren: Hofhansl, Florian, Chacón Madrigal, Eduardo, Morera Beita, Albert, Silla Cortés, Fernando, Huber, Werner, Weissenhofer, Anton, Wanek, Wolfgang
Format: artículo original
Publikationsdatum:2019
Beschreibung:The Golfo Dulce region located in southwestern Costa Rica represents one of the remnant global biodiversity hotspots containing the largest Pacific lowland tropical forest in Central America. Recent biogeographical analyses revealed a close relation of taxonomic tree species composition to northern South America. However, the underlying factors leading to the extraordinary taxonomic richness of the region have so far remained elusive. In this study, we analyzed the composition of tropical forest plant communities (trees, lianas and palms with a diameter at breast height ≥10 cm) occurring in one-hectare permanent forest inventory plots. To that end, we established 20 forest sites across the Golfo Dulce region, i.e. 5 geographic locations each comprising 4 forest habitat types in ridge, slope and ravine positions, as well as in secondary forest stands. Our study highlights the oligarchic dominance of tropical forest plant communities in the Golfo Dulce region, and further suggests that plant species composition is associated with topography, disturbance history and edaphic properties. The finding that oligarchic and rare species are affected by environmental filtering has important implications for assessment and modeling of important ecosystem functions, such as carbon storage and productivity, as well as nutrient cycling and trophic interactions and thus could potentially improve biodiversity conservation and management strategies.
Land:Kérwá
Institution:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
OAI Identifier:oai:kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/80481
Online Zugang:https://www.zobodat.at/publikation_volumes.php?id=62607
https://hdl.handle.net/10669/80481
Stichwort:Biodiversity
Biogeography
Costa Rica
Golfo Dulce
Tropical plant communities