Incomplete recovery of tree community composition and rare species after 120 years of tropical forest succession in Panama

Author:

Elsy Alexander D.1ORCID,Pfeifer Marion2,Jones Isabel L.1,DeWalt Saara J.3,Lopez Omar R.45,Dent Daisy H.467

Affiliation:

1. Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Stirling Stirling UK

2. School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Modelling, Evidence and Policy Group Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

3. Department of Biological Sciences Clemson University Clemson South Carolina USA

4. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Balboa Panama

5. Instituto de Investigaciones Científicas y Servicios de Alta Tecnología (INDICASAT) Clayton Panama

6. Max Planck Institute for Animal Behavior Konstanz Germany

7. Department of Environmental Systems Science ETH Zürich Zurich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractDetermining how fully tropical forests regenerating on abandoned land recover characteristics of old‐growth forests is increasingly important for understanding their role in conserving rare species and maintaining ecosystem services. Despite this, our understanding of forest structure and community composition recovery throughout succession is incomplete, as many tropical chronosequences do not extend beyond the first 50 years of succession. Here, we examined trajectories of forest recovery across eight 1‐hectare plots in middle and later stages of forest succession (40–120 years) and five 1‐hectare old‐growth plots, in the Barro Colorado Nature Monument (BCNM), Panama. We first verified that forest age had a greater effect than edaphic or topographic variation on forest structure, diversity and composition and then corroborated results from smaller plots censused 20 years previously. Tree species diversity (but not species richness) and forest structure had fully recovered to old‐growth levels by 40 and 90 years, respectively. However, rare species were missing, and old‐growth specialists were in low abundance, in the mid‐ and late secondary forest plots, leading to incomplete recovery of species composition even by 120 years into succession. We also found evidence that dominance early in succession by a long‐lived pioneer led to altered forest structure and delayed recovery of species diversity and composition well past a century after land abandonment. Our results illustrate the critical importance of old‐growth and old secondary forests for biodiversity conservation, given that recovery of community composition may take several centuries, particularly when a long‐lived pioneer dominates in early succession.Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Natural Environment Research Council

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference119 articles.

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3. Baillie I. Elsenbeer H. Barthold F. Grimm R. &Stallard R.(2006).Semi‐detailed soil survey of Barro Colorado Island Panama. Retrieved from https://striresearch.si.edu/bci‐soil‐map/.

4. Soil resources and topography shape local tree community structure in tropical forests

5. Bartoń K.(2022).MuMIn: Multi‐model inference. R package version 1.47.1. Retrieved from https://cran.r‐project.org/package=MuMIn.

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