Long term monitering of vegetation in a tropical deciduous forest in Mudumalai,southern India


Autoria(s): Sukumar, R; Dattaraja, HS; Suresh, HS; Radhakrishnan, J; Vasudeva, R; Nirmala, S; Joshi, NV
Data(s)

10/05/1992

Resumo

As part of an international network of large plots to study tropical vegetation dynamics on a long-term basis, a 50-hectare permanent plot was set up during 1988-89 in the deciduous forests of Mudumalai, southern India. Within this plot 25,929 living woody plants (71 species) above 1 cm DBH (diameter at breast height) were identified, measured, tagged and mapped. Species abundances corresponded to the characteristic log-normal distribution. The four most abundant species (Kydia calycina, Lagerstroemia microcarpa, Terminalia crenulata and Helicteres isora) constituted nearly 56% of total stems, while seven species were represented by only one individual each in the plot. Variance/mean ratios of density showed most species to have clumped distributions. The population declined overall by 14% during the first two years, largely due to elephant and fire-mediated damage to Kydia calycina and Helicteres isora. In this article we discuss the need for large plots to study vegetation dynamics.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/37196/1/Long_term_monitering.pdf

Sukumar, R and Dattaraja, HS and Suresh, HS and Radhakrishnan, J and Vasudeva, R and Nirmala, S and Joshi, NV (1992) Long term monitering of vegetation in a tropical deciduous forest in Mudumalai,southern India. In: Current Science (Bangalore), 62 (9). pp. 608-616.

Publicador

Indian Academy of Sciences

Relação

http://www.ias.ac.in/j_archive/currsci/62/vol62contents.html

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/37196/

Palavras-Chave #Centre for Ecological Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed