Lichen community structure and richness in three mid-elevation secondary forests in Costa Rica

被引:3
|
作者
Cordero, Roberto A. S. [1 ]
Garrido, Ana [2 ]
Perez-Molina, Junior Pastor [1 ]
Ramirez-Alan, Oscar [3 ]
Chavez, Jose Luis
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Costa Rica, Escuela Ciencias Biol, Lab Ecol Func & Ecosistemas Trop, Heredia, Costa Rica
[2] Univ Alcala, Escuela Ciencias Ambientales, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ Nacl Costa Rica, Escuela Ciencias Biol, Heredia, Costa Rica
关键词
cloud forest; community composition; corticolous lichens; Costa Rica; hemeroby; lichen diversity; AIR-POLLUTION; FOLIICOLOUS LICHENS; SPECIES COMPOSITION; EPIPHYTIC LICHENS; RAIN-FOREST; DIVERSITY; BIODIVERSITY; INDICATORS; ASCOMYCOTA; INVENTORY;
D O I
10.15517/rbt.v69i2.46162
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Introduction: Lichen diversity, community structure, composition and species abundance have been used as indicators of the integrity and ecological continuity of tropical forest ecosystems. Objectives: To assess corticolous lichen species composition, diversity, and ecological importance of three forested stands differing in time of abandonment as indicators of how passive restoration influences the lichen community assemblage. Methods: We surveyed individual lichens on tree stems of a reference old secondary forest and a young secondary forest (50 and 14-year-old natural regeneration after pasture abandonment, respectively), and in a 35-year-old exotic cypress tree plantation, in the oriental Central Valley, in Orosi, Costa Rica. Standard diversity, similarity indexes, and the importance value index were calculated. An NMDS analysis was performed on the community structure parameters and in a presence-absence matrix. Results: We found 64 lichen species in 25 families with 42, 21, and 23 species, and 20, 10, and 15 families, in the young and old secondary forests, and the cypress plantation, respectively. Cryptothecia sp. possessed the highest importance across sites. More than 87 % of the species are rare. The combined IVI of the top three families were: 36, 48.5, and 74.8 % in the young and old forests and the Cypress plantation sites, respectively. Overall, Arthoniaceae is in the top three families. The young forest had the highest species richness, but the old forest presented the best evenness. Similarity and diversity indexes suggest a particularly low resemblance in the lichen communities but a smooth gradient differentiation between the three forests, which was confirmed by the NMDS test. The homogeneity test identified great differences in ecological importance and composition. Conclusions: This region contains a distinctive assemblage of species resulting in a strong community differentiation by site, reflecting the influence of ecophysiological and microclimatic factors that define lichen establishment and survival and suggesting a great regional beta diversity, within a fragmented landscape. Greater connectivity and passive restoration strategies resulted in greater diversity and a more heterogeneous community structure on both forests than the corticolous community of the abandoned plantation. Protection of forest fragments will maximize the integrity of future forests.
引用
收藏
页码:688 / 699
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Recovery of amphibian species richness and composition in a chronosequence of secondary forests, northeastern Costa Rica
    Hilje, Branko
    Aide, T. Mitchell
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2012, 146 (01) : 170 - 176
  • [2] Recovery of aboveground biomass, species richness and composition in tropical secondary forests in SW Costa Rica
    Oberleitner, Florian
    Egger, Carola
    Oberdorfer, Sarah
    Dullinger, Stefan
    Wanek, Wolfgang
    Hietz, Peter
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2021, 479
  • [3] Richness of cultivable endophytic fungi along an altitudinal gradient in wet forests of Costa Rica
    Rojas-Jimenez, Keilor
    Hernandez, Myriam
    Blanco, Jorge
    Diego Vargas, Luis
    Guillermo Acosta-Vargas, Luis
    Tamayo, Giselle
    FUNGAL ECOLOGY, 2016, 20 : 124 - 131
  • [4] Comparing forest structure and biodiversity on private and public land: secondary tropical dry forests in Costa Rica
    McClellan, Moana
    Montgomery, Rebecca
    Nelson, Kristen
    Becknell, Justin
    BIOTROPICA, 2018, 50 (03) : 510 - 519
  • [5] Four centuries of vegetation change in the mid-elevation Andean forests of Ecuador
    Huisman, Seringe N.
    Bush, Mark B.
    McMichael, Crystal N. H.
    VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY, 2019, 28 (06) : 679 - 689
  • [6] Midpoint attractor models resolve the mid-elevation peak in Himalayan plant species richness
    Macek, Martin
    Dvorsky, Miroslav
    Klimes, Adam
    Wild, Jan
    Dolezal, Jiri
    Kopecky, Martin
    ECOGRAPHY, 2021, 44 (11) : 1665 - 1677
  • [7] How forest structure varies with elevation in old growth and secondary forest in Costa Rica
    Mazon, Miguel Munoz
    Klanderud, Kari
    Finegan, Bryan
    Veintimilla, Dario
    Bermeo, Diego
    Murrieta, Eduardo
    Delgado, Diego
    Sheil, Douglas
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2020, 469
  • [8] The Importance of Forest Elephants for Vegetation Structure Modification and Its Influence on the Bird Community of a Mid-Elevation Forest on Mount Cameroon, West-Central Africa
    Kamga, Solange Mekuate
    Tamungang, Simon Awafor
    Awa, Taku, II
    Ewome, Francis Luma
    Motombi, Francis Njie
    Horak, David
    Riegert, Jan
    DIVERSITY-BASEL, 2022, 14 (03):
  • [9] Primate richness and abundance is driven by both forest structure and conservation scenario in Costa Rica
    Johnson, Christopher Eric
    Tafoya, Kathryn A.
    Beck, Peter
    Concilio, Amy
    White, Kurt E.
    Quiros, Rodolfo
    Wasserman, Michael D.
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (09):
  • [10] Soil carbon dynamics in a chronosequence of secondary forests in northeastern Costa Rica
    Schedlbauer, Jessica L.
    Kavanagh, Kathleen L.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2008, 255 (3-4) : 1326 - 1335