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The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics

Forest successional processes following disturbance take decades to play out, even in tropical forests. Nonetheless, records of vegetation change in this ecosystem are scarce, increasing the importance of the chronosequence approach to study forest recovery. However, this approach requires accurate...

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Autores principales: Zalamea, Paul-Camilo, Heuret, Patrick, Sarmiento, Carolina, Rodríguez, Manuel, Berthouly, Anne, Guitet, Stéphane, Nicolini, Eric, Delnatte, César, Barthélémy, Daniel, Stevenson, Pablo R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3416824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22916144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042643
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author Zalamea, Paul-Camilo
Heuret, Patrick
Sarmiento, Carolina
Rodríguez, Manuel
Berthouly, Anne
Guitet, Stéphane
Nicolini, Eric
Delnatte, César
Barthélémy, Daniel
Stevenson, Pablo R.
author_facet Zalamea, Paul-Camilo
Heuret, Patrick
Sarmiento, Carolina
Rodríguez, Manuel
Berthouly, Anne
Guitet, Stéphane
Nicolini, Eric
Delnatte, César
Barthélémy, Daniel
Stevenson, Pablo R.
author_sort Zalamea, Paul-Camilo
collection PubMed
description Forest successional processes following disturbance take decades to play out, even in tropical forests. Nonetheless, records of vegetation change in this ecosystem are scarce, increasing the importance of the chronosequence approach to study forest recovery. However, this approach requires accurate dating of secondary forests, which until now was a difficult and/or expensive task. Cecropia is a widespread and abundant pioneer tree genus of the Neotropics. Here we propose and validate a rapid and straightforward method to estimate the age of secondary forest patches based on morphological observations of Cecropia trees. We found that Cecropia-inferred ages were highly correlated with known ages of the forest. We also demonstrate that Cecropia can be used to accurately date disturbances and propose twenty-one species distributed all over the geographical range of the genus as potential secondary forest chronometer species. Our method is limited in applicability by the maximal longevity of Cecropia individuals. Although the oldest chronosequence used in this study was 20 years old, we argue that at least for the first four decades after disturbance, the method described in this study provides very accurate estimations of secondary forest ages. The age of pioneer trees provides not only information needed to calculate the recovery of carbon stocks that would help to improve forest management, but also provides information needed to characterize the initial floristic composition and the rates of species remigration into secondary forest. Our contribution shows how successional studies can be reliably and inexpensively extended without the need to obtain forest ages based on expensive or potentially inaccurate data across the Neotropics.
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spelling pubmed-34168242012-08-22 The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics Zalamea, Paul-Camilo Heuret, Patrick Sarmiento, Carolina Rodríguez, Manuel Berthouly, Anne Guitet, Stéphane Nicolini, Eric Delnatte, César Barthélémy, Daniel Stevenson, Pablo R. PLoS One Research Article Forest successional processes following disturbance take decades to play out, even in tropical forests. Nonetheless, records of vegetation change in this ecosystem are scarce, increasing the importance of the chronosequence approach to study forest recovery. However, this approach requires accurate dating of secondary forests, which until now was a difficult and/or expensive task. Cecropia is a widespread and abundant pioneer tree genus of the Neotropics. Here we propose and validate a rapid and straightforward method to estimate the age of secondary forest patches based on morphological observations of Cecropia trees. We found that Cecropia-inferred ages were highly correlated with known ages of the forest. We also demonstrate that Cecropia can be used to accurately date disturbances and propose twenty-one species distributed all over the geographical range of the genus as potential secondary forest chronometer species. Our method is limited in applicability by the maximal longevity of Cecropia individuals. Although the oldest chronosequence used in this study was 20 years old, we argue that at least for the first four decades after disturbance, the method described in this study provides very accurate estimations of secondary forest ages. The age of pioneer trees provides not only information needed to calculate the recovery of carbon stocks that would help to improve forest management, but also provides information needed to characterize the initial floristic composition and the rates of species remigration into secondary forest. Our contribution shows how successional studies can be reliably and inexpensively extended without the need to obtain forest ages based on expensive or potentially inaccurate data across the Neotropics. Public Library of Science 2012-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3416824/ /pubmed/22916144 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042643 Text en © 2012 Zalamea et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zalamea, Paul-Camilo
Heuret, Patrick
Sarmiento, Carolina
Rodríguez, Manuel
Berthouly, Anne
Guitet, Stéphane
Nicolini, Eric
Delnatte, César
Barthélémy, Daniel
Stevenson, Pablo R.
The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title_full The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title_fullStr The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title_full_unstemmed The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title_short The Genus Cecropia: A Biological Clock to Estimate the Age of Recently Disturbed Areas in the Neotropics
title_sort genus cecropia: a biological clock to estimate the age of recently disturbed areas in the neotropics
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3416824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22916144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042643
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