Literature DB >> 17006512

Continental-scale patterns of canopy tree composition and function across Amazonia.

Hans ter Steege1, Nigel C A Pitman, Oliver L Phillips, Jerome Chave, Daniel Sabatier, Alvaro Duque, Jean-François Molino, Marie-Françoise Prévost, Rodolphe Spichiger, Hernán Castellanos, Patricio von Hildebrand, Rodolfo Vásquez.   

Abstract

The world's greatest terrestrial stores of biodiversity and carbon are found in the forests of northern South America, where large-scale biogeographic patterns and processes have recently begun to be described. Seven of the nine countries with territory in the Amazon basin and the Guiana shield have carried out large-scale forest inventories, but such massive data sets have been little exploited by tropical plant ecologists. Although forest inventories often lack the species-level identifications favoured by tropical plant ecologists, their consistency of measurement and vast spatial coverage make them ideally suited for numerical analyses at large scales, and a valuable resource to describe the still poorly understood spatial variation of biomass, diversity, community composition and forest functioning across the South American tropics. Here we show, by using the seven forest inventories complemented with trait and inventory data collected elsewhere, two dominant gradients in tree composition and function across the Amazon, one paralleling a major gradient in soil fertility and the other paralleling a gradient in dry season length. The data set also indicates that the dominance of Fabaceae in the Guiana shield is not necessarily the result of root adaptations to poor soils (nodulation or ectomycorrhizal associations) but perhaps also the result of their remarkably high seed mass there as a potential adaptation to low rates of disturbance.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17006512     DOI: 10.1038/nature05134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  82 in total

1.  A universal airborne LiDAR approach for tropical forest carbon mapping.

Authors:  Gregory P Asner; Joseph Mascaro; Helene C Muller-Landau; Ghislain Vieilledent; Romuald Vaudry; Maminiaina Rasamoelina; Jefferson S Hall; Michiel van Breugel
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2011-10-28       Impact factor: 3.225

Review 2.  The Amazon basin in transition.

Authors:  Eric A Davidson; Alessandro C de Araújo; Paulo Artaxo; Jennifer K Balch; I Foster Brown; Mercedes M C Bustamante; Michael T Coe; Ruth S DeFries; Michael Keller; Marcos Longo; J William Munger; Wilfrid Schroeder; Britaldo S Soares-Filho; Carlos M Souza; Steven C Wofsy
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-01-18       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Fire as a selective force in a Bornean tropical everwet forest.

Authors:  J W Ferry Slik; Floris C Breman; Caroline Bernard; Marloes van Beek; Charles H Cannon; Karl A O Eichhorn; Kade Sidiyasa
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2010-09-02       Impact factor: 3.225

4.  Ecosystem heterogeneity determines the ecological resilience of the Amazon to climate change.

Authors:  Naomi M Levine; Ke Zhang; Marcos Longo; Alessandro Baccini; Oliver L Phillips; Simon L Lewis; Esteban Alvarez-Dávila; Ana Cristina Segalin de Andrade; Roel J W Brienen; Terry L Erwin; Ted R Feldpausch; Abel Lorenzo Monteagudo Mendoza; Percy Nuñez Vargas; Adriana Prieto; Javier Eduardo Silva-Espejo; Yadvinder Malhi; Paul R Moorcroft
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-12-28       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Hyperspectral remote detection of niche partitioning among canopy trees driven by blowdown gap disturbances in the Central Amazon.

Authors:  Jeffrey Q Chambers; Amanda L Robertson; Vilany M C Carneiro; Adriano J N Lima; Marie-Louise Smith; Lucie C Plourde; Niro Higuchi
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2009-02-05       Impact factor: 3.225

6.  Colloquium paper: how many tree species are there in the Amazon and how many of them will go extinct?

Authors:  Stephen P Hubbell; Fangliang He; Richard Condit; Luís Borda-de-Agua; James Kellner; Hans Ter Steege
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-08-11       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Contrasting patterns of diameter and biomass increment across tree functional groups in Amazonian forests.

Authors:  Helen C Keeling; Timothy R Baker; Rodolfo Vasquez Martinez; Abel Monteagudo; Oliver L Phillips
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2008-10-14       Impact factor: 3.225

8.  The sensitivity of wood production to seasonal and interannual variations in climate in a lowland Amazonian rainforest.

Authors:  Lucy Rowland; Y Malhi; J E Silva-Espejo; F Farfán-Amézquita; K Halladay; C E Doughty; P Meir; O L Phillips
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2013-09-12       Impact factor: 3.225

9.  Tropical timber rush in Peruvian Amazonia: spatial allocation of forest concessions in an uninventoried frontier.

Authors:  Matti Salo; Tuuli Toivonen
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2009-08-11       Impact factor: 3.266

10.  Late Paleocene fossils from the Cerrejon Formation, Colombia, are the earliest record of Neotropical rainforest.

Authors:  Scott L Wing; Fabiany Herrera; Carlos A Jaramillo; Carolina Gómez-Navarro; Peter Wilf; Conrad C Labandeira
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-10-15       Impact factor: 11.205

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