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Tropical montane vegetation dynamics near the upper cloud belt strongly associated with a shifting ITCZ and fire
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ArticleType of Content
Scientific researchSubject
Recursos naturales - República DominicanaRecursos forestales
Incendios forestales
Cambio climático
Language
EnglishCollection
- Investigación ambiental [1462]
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Show full item recordAbstract: | Tropical montane forests house unusual and diverse biota and are considered highly vulnerable to climate change, particularly near the trade wind inversion (TWI) – the upper end of the cloud belt that defines tropical montane cloud forest (TMCF). The upper cloud belt has two possible futures: one hypothesis postulates a ‘lifting cloud base’, raising both the upper and lower ends of the cloud belt; the other expects the upper end of the cloud belt will change independently, with a ‘shifting TWI’. We used a ˜5900-year-long palaeorecord of vegetation and fire from a small forest hollow at 2455 m in the Cordillera Central, Dominican Republic. The site sits near the upper limit of TMCF taxa and the TWI and allows us to evaluate the relationship between vegetation dynamics and two potential drivers of TWI elevation – the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO). |
Author(s): | Crausbay, Shelley D.
Martin, Patrick H. Kelly, Eugene F. |
Date: | 2022 |
Published: | Journal of Ecology, 103(4), 891-903 |
Citation: | Crausbay, S. D., Martin, P. H., & Kelly, E. F. (2015). Tropical montane vegetation dynamics near the upper cloud belt strongly associated with a shifting ITCZ and fire. Journal of Ecology, 103(4), 891-903. Recuperado de: |
URI: | https://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/3834
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