Published August 17, 2022 | Version v1
Software Open

Local canopy disturbance as an explanation for long-term increases in liana abundance

  • 1. Marquette University
  • 2. Leiden University
  • 3. Yale University
  • 4. University of Illinois System
  • 5. University of Florida
  • 6. University of California Los Angeles

Description

Canopy disturbance explains liana abundance and distribution within tropical forests and thus may also explain the widespread pattern of increasing liana abundance; however, this hypothesis remains untested. We used a 10-year study (2007 – 2017) of 117,100 rooted lianas in an old-growth Panamanian forest to test whether local canopy disturbance explains increasing liana abundance. We found that liana density increased 29.2% and basal area 12.5%. The vast majority of these increases were associated with clonal stem proliferation following canopy disturbance, particularly in liana-dense, low-canopy gaps, which had far greater liana increases than did undisturbed forest. Lianas may be ecological niche constructors; arresting tree regeneration in gaps and thus creating a high-light environment that favors sustained liana proliferation. Our findings demonstrate that liana abundance is increasing rapidly and their ability to proliferate via copious clonal stem production in canopy gaps explains much of their increase in this and possibly other tropical forests.

Notes

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: DEB‐0613666,DEB‐0939907,IOS‐1558093

Files

procedural_scripts_overview.txt

Files (146.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:19bb6354b6e885e8af7bae5c5e9f7f42
62.9 kB Download
md5:acbd0a8c0656dad590e69ed62c27ffd7
32.1 kB Download
md5:1e1ef23d770900789de9f1d78e9de6b1
17.3 kB Download
md5:56aff548114e3fff72606f4d23dbc400
4.3 kB Preview Download
md5:bcfd7406d2671e611f839169db6bc75c
29.9 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is source of
10.5061/dryad.7sqv9s4sm (DOI)