Small-Scale Altitudinal Variation in Lowland Wet Tropical Forest Vegetation
- 1 July 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Ecology
- Vol. 73 (2) , 505-516
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2260490
Abstract
All trees and lianas (.gtoreq. 10 cm dbh) on 12.4 ha of primary lowland wet tropical forest at La Selva, Costa Rica, were enumerated. A total of 5530 live stems were encountered, representing 269 spp. Palms comprised 25.5% of stems, lianas 2.4%, tree ferns 0.1% and true trees 72.0%. The most abundant species, Pentaclethra macroloba (Mimosaceae), accounted for 13.6% of stems. Species richness ranged from 79-107 spp. per ha. Species composition varies continuously with altitude over a range of 39 m, as shown by a detrended correspondence analysis ordination of data from 0.04-ha subplots. The pool of available species at any altitude is large, and floristic variation between sites at the same altitude is influenced by chance. Seasonally-flooded sites are floristically distinct from sites on higher ground, and show great variation in species composition over short distances. Microtopography and drainage features in a 1.8-ha swamp forest were mapped. There is a dramatic reduction of stem density and species richness with increasingly poor drainage. This lower number of species reflects the exclusion of species intolerant of waterlogged soils.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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