Author | May, Thomas | |
Accessioned date | 2023-10-30T18:38:24Z | |
Available date | 2023-10-30T18:38:24Z | |
Year | 2000 | |
Citation | May, T. (2000). Five years of post-fire vegetation succession in a Caribbean cloud forest (Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic). Ecotropica, 6(2), 117-127. Recuperado de: | es |
URI | https://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/3503 | |
Abstract | During the 5 years after a man made fire in a cloud forest of the Cordillera Central of the Dominican Republic, species composition, vegetation cover and height were monitored in a plot of 10×30 m. Forty-four of 92 tree and shrub individuals, representing 8 of 22 species, survived the fire, mainly by sprouting from subterranean buds. Development of vegetation cover showed a lag phase of 1 to 1.5 years and then increased up to about 90% five years after the fire. Colonizing tree and shrub species were dominant in the post-fire vegetation, while immigration of species from mature cloud forest was very low. Longitudinal growth rates of colonizing tree species reached values of up to 1 m per year. Species richness reached a peak about three years after the fire. Afterwards, short-lived colonizing species disappeared and species richness decreased. | es |
Language | English | es |
Published | Ecotropica, 6(2), 117-127 | es |
Rights | © Society for Tropical Ecology: Available at: https://www.soctropecol.eu/ | es |
Subject | Recursos naturales - República Dominicana | es |
Subject | Recursos forestales | es |
Subject | Incendios forestales | es |
Title | Five years of post-fire vegetation succession in a Caribbean cloud forest (Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic) | es |
Material type | Article | es |
Type of content | Scientific research | es |
Access | Open | es |
Audience | Technicians, professionals and scientists | es |