4 resultados para Merostachys multiramea


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The present study aimed to analyze the floristic and structural descriptors of tree species natural regeneration in a forest sector with synchronized bamboo (Merostachys multiramea Hackel) die-off (CT) and an adjacent area with continuous canopy cover (ST) in an araucaria forest fragment in the municipality of Lages, Santa Catarina state. A total of 14, 5x5m, plots (six plots in CT sector and eight in ST sector) were allocated, where all tree species regenerative individual with circumference at breast height smaller than 15cm and height higher than 25cm was measured (diameter at soil level) and identified. The richest families were: Myrtaceae (nine), Solanaceae (six) and Aquifoliaceae (four). The Shannon Diversity Index in ST and CT sectors were respectively 2.73 and 2.31. The species with the highest importance values in CT sector were Solanum variabile, Piptocarpha angustifolia, Mimosa scabrella, Jacaranda puberula and Solanum pseudoquina. In ST sector, the species with highest importance values were Myrsine lorentziana, Casearia decandra, Cinnamodendron dinisii, Drimys brasiliensis and Ilex paraguariensis. The results showed that the synchronized bamboo die-off influenced the spatial variation in the floristic and structural descriptors of the tree species natural regeneration.

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Merostachys riedeliana Rupr. é uma espécie monocárpica com floração cíclica e muito freqüente em sub-bosques de fragmentos florestais do sul do estado de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Sua biologia floral e seu sistema de reprodução foram estudados e comparados com os de outros bambus. Devido ao complexo sistema de rizomas, formam touceiras vigorosas no interior da floresta, ocorrendo a interrupção na produção de novos colmos meses antes do aparecimento das primeiras inflorescências. O início da floração maciça e da morte da população ocorreu em outubro de 1998 e maio de 1999, respectivamente, com pico de floração durante a estação quente e chuvosa (dezembro e janeiro). As inflorescências espiciformes possuem, em média, 29 espiguetas. Estas são hermafroditas com três anteras poricidas e dois estigmas plumosos que se expõem durante a antese. O pólen é abundante e facilmente liberado das anteras pelo vento ou pelos visitantes. Apis mellifera L. e Trigona spinipes (F.) foram os visitantes mais freqüentes, atuando como pilhadores de pólen e, ocasionalmente, através de movimentos vibratórios, como elementos auxiliares para a dispersão do pólen. A alta pluviosidade durante a floração e a escassez de vento no sub-bosque da floresta, podem diminuir a efetividade da anemofilia. No entanto, vários caracteres morfológicos das espiguetas, queda de folhas e o hábito espacialmente agrupado, apontam para uma polinização pelo vento. Testes de polinização controlada, mostraram que M. riedeliana é autocompatível (ISI 0,99). A auto-incompatibilidade não favorece a formação de frutos em clones vegetais, ao passo que a autocompatibilidade poderia resultar em uma elevada produção de sementes. Assim, a possível ocorrência de clones de M. riedeliana nos fragmentos florestais, originados pelo crescimento vegetativo durante os intervalos reprodutivos de 30-32 anos, poderiam explicar o alto investimento na produção de espiguetas e a formação de frutos provenientes da autocompatibilidade.

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The influence of a population of the understorey woody bamboo Merostachys riedeliana and different flooding regimes on tree community dynamics in a section of tropical semideciduous forest in South-Eastern Brazil was examined. A forest section with an area of 1.6 ha composed of 71 adjacent plots was located on a slope ending at the river margin. The section was divided into five topographical sectors according to the mean duration of river floods. In 1991 and 1998 all trees with a diameter at the base of the trunk greater than or equal to 5 cm were measured, identified and tagged, and all live bamboo culms were counted. Annualised estimates of the rates of tree mortality and recruitment, gain and loss of tree basal area, and change in bamboo density were calculated for each of the 71 plots and five topographical sectors as well as for diameter classes and tree species. To segregate patterns arising from spatially autocorrelated events, geostatistical analyses were used prior to statistical comparisons and correlations. In general, mortality rates were not compensated by recruitment rates but there was a net increase in basal area in all sectors, suggesting that the tree community as a whole was in a building phase. Tree community dynamics of the point bar forest (Depression and Levee sectors) differed from that of the upland forest (Ridgetop, Middle Slope and Lower Slope sectors) in the extremely high rates of gain in basal area. The predominant and specialised species, Inga vera and Salix humboldtiana, are probably favoured by relaxed competition in an environment stressed by long-lasting floods. In the upland forest, mortality rates were highest at the Middle Slope, particularly for smaller trees, while recruitment rates were lowest. As bamboo clumps were concentrated in this sector, the locally higher instability in the tree community probably resulted from the direct interference of bamboos. The density of bamboo culms in the upland forest was negatively correlated with the rates of tree recruitment and gain in basal area, and positively correlated with tree mortality rates. Bamboos therefore seemed to restrict the recruitment, growth and survival of trees.