Title: Tropical%20forests
1Tropical forests
- Climate and distribution
- Forest characteristics and phenology
- Direct nutrient cycling
- Regeneration and gap dynamics
- Anthropogenic disturbance - shifting cultivation
and pastures - Forest fragmentation and conservation
- Late Quaternary climate change and conservation
2Tropical forest regional climate
3Tropical forestsproductivity and diversity
- Primary productivity (forests) g m-2
yr-1 Tropical 1500 1800 2000 Temperate 100
0 1300 1500 Boreal 500 800 1000
- Diversity Malaysia Amazonas Africa
- Plants 60 000 50 000 30 000
- Birds 127 270 150 (3 km2) (3 km2) (50
km2) - Bats 81 98 115
4Canopy stratification(how many
strata?)multiple strata facilitate high
productivity and diversity
5Density variations in rainforest stands
6High stem density
Diversity majority of trees are rare - densities
lt1/ha.
- Characters
- lots of small poles
- drip-tipleaves
- thin bark
7Leaf shape acute (drip-tip), entire margin
scratch and sniff taxonomy
lichen growth on palm leaf
8Treefalls
9Tree stability on wet, clay-rich tropical soils
10Buttresses
Stilts
Plexus
11Cauliflory
12Lianas and vines
13Epiphytesbromeliads and orchids
14Phenology Malaysian rainforest
of trees
Triggers degree of water stress and photoperiod.
Daylength variations of 15 minutes can trigger
flowering in some tropical tree species.
15Biomass variations in rainforest stands
16Necromass variations in rainforest stands
17Nutrient storage nitrogen
18Nutrient storage phosphorus
19Nutrient storage potassium
20Root distribution and the direct nutrient cycle
- Dense root mats in surface soil exploit nutrients
released by rapidly decaying organic matter on
the forest floor. - Nutrient capture by tree roots facilitated by
mycorrhizal associations (predominantly
endomycorrhizal and vesicular-arbuscular).
21Nutrient shunts leaf-cutter ants and termites
22Herbivore and insectivore mammals
23Seed/fruit eaters
24Herbivore resistance
- mechanical spines e.g. on climbing palms
- lactiferous rubber (Hevea sp.) or
- chemical secondary chemicals in roots, stems,
leaves or seed coats to dissuade herbivores from
attacking tissue (see next slide).The tropical
forest as a pharmaceutical factory. - biological companion ants on Acacia shrubs in
Central America
?
25Wapishan woman with cassava press, Guyana
26Regeneration and the maintenance of diversity
27Regeneration into gaps intense competition for
light
28Gap microclimates
29Antropogenic gaps and succession
milpas Belize and Guyana
30Nutrient loss from shifting cultivation plot
results from severance of direct nutrient cycle
and changes in soil microclimate and hydrology
31Forest clearance Rondonia, Brazil
1975
1992
100 km2
32Forest clearance for pasture, Guatemala compare
with size of milpa clearing
33Pasturizationlog, burn, seed in Amazonas
34Succession on abandoned pastures, Amazonia
- 60,000 km2 land in pasture (mid-1980s)
- Generally abandoned after 4-8 years
- Pasture disturbances larger, more prolonged and
more intense than slash and burn agriculture
abandonment as a result of soil infertility
(especially phosphorus deficiency), insect
attack, and weed competition
Uhl et al., 1988. J. Ecology
35Pasture use history
36Biomass andnecromass
37From green hell to red desert?
38Abandoned pastures - nutrient stocks(NB top
0.5m of soil onlyN values / 5)
39Rates of species replacement in rainforest
succession
40Biodiversity on abandoned pastures undergoing
succession
Heavy
41Recovery of tropical forests following disturbance
Karen Holl (UC Santa Cruz) working on abandoned
cattle pasture in Costa Rica has identified the
following obstacles to TRF recovery 1. Tree
seeds have short viability 2. Tree seed dispersal
is generally short (large seeds commonly
animal-dispersed) seedfall in pasture is only
1/10th that in the forest. 3. Heavy predation of
seeds in pasture 4. Low survivorship of
germinating seeds (severe microclimate, low
mycorrhizal infection and high herbivory) 5. Compe
tition from non-native pasture grasses (e.g.
Imperata cylindrica)
42Seed dispersal into abandoned pasture, Costa Rica
Mean no. seeds / m2
dispersal more effective when tree branches
placed in pasture as perches for forest birds
43Rainforest fragmentsThomas Lovejoys experiments
Forest species survival? recruitment? dispersal?
Patch minimum size?
44LGM in the humid tropics plant and animal
responses
Were tropical rain forests restricted to small
refuges at LGM?
45The rise of refuge theoryendemism in the
Neo-tropical forest avifauna
Haffer (1969) Science, 165, 131-137.
from Prance and Lovejoy (1985) Amazonia, Oxford
U.P.
46Caryocar ranges
47Ranges of related forest bird species and
subspecies
Trumpeters (Psophia)
Jacamars (Galbula)
48Ranges of related forest bird species and
subspecies
Aracaris (Pteroglossus)
Toucans (Rhamphastos)
49Species and subspecies rangesHeliconius
butterflies
50Inferred LGM forest refuges based on 1.
birds2. lizards3. butterflies4. four tree
families5. scorpions
From Nores (1999) J. Biogeography, 26, 475-485
51TRF refuges a minimalist reconstruction
Lake Pata
forest desert
from Tallis (1991) Plant Community History,
Chapman and Hall
52Late Quaternary climate change in intertropical
Africa the lake-level evidence
low intermediate and high stands
Holocene LGM
53Lake Pata pollen record
Podocarps
Grasses
LGM Holocene
Colinvaux et al., 1996, Science, 247, 85-88
54Refugia a failed hypothesis?
we conclude that the Amazon was not arid at any
time in the Pleistocene, that the lowlands were
in the main always forested, that forest biota
were never fragmented into isolates called
refugia, and that the critical global changes in
Amazon history were the warmings of interglacials
that intermittently perturbed the great and
persistent ice-age forests. Much or all of this
needs testing with more data. Colinvaux et al.,
2000. Quat. Sci. Rev. 19, 141-169.