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HUMAN OR NATURAL DISTURBANCE: LANDSCAPE-SCALE DYNAMICS OF THE TROPICAL FORESTS OF PUERTO RICO

HUMAN OR NATURAL DISTURBANCE: LANDSCAPE-SCALE DYNAMICS OF THE TROPICAL FORESTS OF PUERTO RICO Increasingly, ecologists are recognizing that human disturbance has played an important role in tropical forest history and that many assumptions concerning the relative importance of natural processes warrant re-examination. To assess the historical role of broad-scale human vs. natural disturbance on an intensively studied tropical forest we undertook a landscape-level analysis of forest dynamics in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (LEF; 10871 ha) in eastern Puerto Rico. Using aerial photographs (1936 and 1989), GIS, a model of topographic exposure to hurricane winds, and historical data, we sought to: (1) document historical changes in extent, cover, and type of forest vegetation; (2) evaluate the distribution of land use and hurricane impacts; (3) assess the contributions of these processes in controlling current vegetation patterns; and (4) relate these results to ongoing ecological, conservation, and natural resource discussions. With >1000 m of relief in the LEF, the broad vegetation zones of Tabonuco (<600 m above sea level), Colorado (600––900 m), Dwarf (>900 m), and Palm forest are determined by environmental gradients. However, over the past 60––100 years, forest extent, cover, and type have been transformed: in 1936, 40%% of the LEF was unforested or secondary forest and <50%% had continuous canopy (>80%% cover); in 1989, >97%% was continuous forest. Secondary forest and agricultural lands in 1936 were replaced largely by Tabonuco and Colorado forest, which increased from 8%% and 28%% (1936) to 26%% and 45%% (1989). These broad-scale vegetation dynamics are best explained by a gradient of human land use, intense at low elevations and decreasing on steep, high terrain, which peaked historically around 1900, followed by a gradual decline in agriculture. GIS analysis and historical sources suggest that essentially all of the LEF was affected by human activity and that Tabonuco forest, which is the focus of LTER research, has been most substantially altered and is largely of secondary origin. Rapid reforestation following agricultural decline has obscured much of the past land use and confirms the resiliency of some tropical forests to intensive human disturbance. Impacts of earlier hurricanes (e.g., in 1928 and 1932), although not evident in the broad forest pattern in 1936, may be significant in explaining the distributions of Colorado and Palm forest. Damage from Hurricane Hugo in 1989 indicates that natural disturbance is increasingly important as land use declines and forest cover and height increase. However, this study and post-Hugo studies emphasize that land use legacies are long-lasting and need to be considered in modern ecological studies and natural resource management. The subtle, although persistent, effects of historical human activities may have profound consequences for modern forest ecosystems in the tropics. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Ecological Applications Ecological Society of America

HUMAN OR NATURAL DISTURBANCE: LANDSCAPE-SCALE DYNAMICS OF THE TROPICAL FORESTS OF PUERTO RICO

Ecological Applications , Volume 9 (2) – May 1, 1999

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Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 by the Ecological Society of America
Subject
Articles
ISSN
1051-0761
DOI
10.1890/1051-0761%281999%29009%5B0555:HONDLS%5D2.0.CO%3B2
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Increasingly, ecologists are recognizing that human disturbance has played an important role in tropical forest history and that many assumptions concerning the relative importance of natural processes warrant re-examination. To assess the historical role of broad-scale human vs. natural disturbance on an intensively studied tropical forest we undertook a landscape-level analysis of forest dynamics in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (LEF; 10871 ha) in eastern Puerto Rico. Using aerial photographs (1936 and 1989), GIS, a model of topographic exposure to hurricane winds, and historical data, we sought to: (1) document historical changes in extent, cover, and type of forest vegetation; (2) evaluate the distribution of land use and hurricane impacts; (3) assess the contributions of these processes in controlling current vegetation patterns; and (4) relate these results to ongoing ecological, conservation, and natural resource discussions. With >1000 m of relief in the LEF, the broad vegetation zones of Tabonuco (<600 m above sea level), Colorado (600––900 m), Dwarf (>900 m), and Palm forest are determined by environmental gradients. However, over the past 60––100 years, forest extent, cover, and type have been transformed: in 1936, 40%% of the LEF was unforested or secondary forest and <50%% had continuous canopy (>80%% cover); in 1989, >97%% was continuous forest. Secondary forest and agricultural lands in 1936 were replaced largely by Tabonuco and Colorado forest, which increased from 8%% and 28%% (1936) to 26%% and 45%% (1989). These broad-scale vegetation dynamics are best explained by a gradient of human land use, intense at low elevations and decreasing on steep, high terrain, which peaked historically around 1900, followed by a gradual decline in agriculture. GIS analysis and historical sources suggest that essentially all of the LEF was affected by human activity and that Tabonuco forest, which is the focus of LTER research, has been most substantially altered and is largely of secondary origin. Rapid reforestation following agricultural decline has obscured much of the past land use and confirms the resiliency of some tropical forests to intensive human disturbance. Impacts of earlier hurricanes (e.g., in 1928 and 1932), although not evident in the broad forest pattern in 1936, may be significant in explaining the distributions of Colorado and Palm forest. Damage from Hurricane Hugo in 1989 indicates that natural disturbance is increasingly important as land use declines and forest cover and height increase. However, this study and post-Hugo studies emphasize that land use legacies are long-lasting and need to be considered in modern ecological studies and natural resource management. The subtle, although persistent, effects of historical human activities may have profound consequences for modern forest ecosystems in the tropics.

Journal

Ecological ApplicationsEcological Society of America

Published: May 1, 1999

Keywords: disturbance ; Geographic Information Systems ; hurricanes ; land use ; landscape dynamics ; Mantel test ; modeling ; Puerto Rico ; succession ; topographic exposure ; tropical forests

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