Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.utpl.edu.ec/handle/123456789/19008
Title: Large-scale patterns of turnover and basal area change in Andean forests
Authors: Baez Jacome , V.
Keywords: EMTREE medical terms: Argentina
Article
biogeography
biomass
climate change
controlled study
environmental change
environmental impact
environmental management
environmental monitoring
forest
latitude
nonhuman
precipitation
temperature sensitivity
tree growth
Publisher: PLoS ONE
Abstract: General patterns of forest dynamics and productivity in the Andes Mountains are poorly characterized. Here we present the first large-scale study of Andean forest dynamics using a set of 63 permanent forest plots assembled over the past two decades. In the North-Central Andes tree turnover (mortality and recruitment) and tree growth declined with increasing elevation and decreasing temperature. In addition, basal area increased in Lower Montane Moist Forests but did not change in Higher Montane Humid Forests. However, at higher elevations the lack of net basal area change and excess of mortality over recruitment suggests negative environmental impacts. In North-Western Argentina, forest dynamics appear to be influenced by land use history in addition to environmental variation. Taken together, our results indicate that combinations of abiotic and biotic factors that vary across elevation gradients are important determinants of tree turnover and productivity in the Andes. More extensive and longer-term monitoring and analyses of forest dynamics in permanent plots will be necessary to understand how demographic processes and woody biomass are responding to changing environmental conditions along elevation gradients through this century. © 2015 Báez et al.
URI: http://dspace.utpl.edu.ec/handle/123456789/19008
ISBN: 1932-6203
Appears in Collections:Artículos de revistas Científicas

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