The Impact of Hardwood Line-Planting on Tree and Amphibian Diversity in a Secondary Subtropical Wet Forest of Southeast Puerto Rico |
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Authors: | Mark Nelson Sally Silverstone Kelly C. Reiss Patricia Burrowes Rafael Joglar Molly Robertson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Tropic Ventures Education and Research Foundation , Patillas, Puerto Rico;2. Institute of Ecotechnics , Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA nelson@biospheres.com;4. Biosphere Foundation , Los Angeles, California, USA;5. Center for Environmental Policy, Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida, USA;6. Department of Biology , University of Puerto Rico , Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico;7. Department of Biological Science , University of California Santa Barbara , Santa Barbara, California, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() The impact on tree and amphibian diversity of line-planting of tropical hardwoods—mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla × S. mahagoni) and mahoe (Hibiscus elatus)—was studied in a secondary subtropical wet forest of Puerto Rico. Common coqui (Eleutherodactylus coqui) and melodious coqui (E. wightmanae) are the most frequent frog species; forest coqui (E. portoricensis) is less abundant. Although relative abundance means were slightly greater in the undisturbed forest and during the wet season, differences were not statistically significant suggesting that line-planting did not significantly affect amphibian diversity. The line-planted areas had a slightly higher, but not statistically significant diversity, richness, and evenness of tree species than the unplanted forest. Multi-response permutation procedure (MRPP) showed statistically significant community composition differences between line-planting and control plot trees (T = ?5.89, A = .86; p < .001). But mean similarity among plots in both the line-planted and control plots was relatively low at less than 50% of shared species, indicating high diversity of vegetation in the overall forest area. Canopy cover by tree species greater than 3 cm in dbh was much higher in the undisturbed forest but this difference may be reduced as the young line-planted hardwoods mature. Forest enrichment through line-planting of valuable timber species in secondary subtropical wet forest does not significantly affect tree diversity. |
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Keywords: | amphibian coqui diversity equitability forest enrichment frog hardwood plantation Hibiscus elatus line-planting mahoe mahogany Puerto Rico secondary species richness subtropical wet forest sustainable forestry Swietenia spp |
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