Avalos Gerardo, Hoell Kelly, Gardner Jocelyn, Anderson Scott, Lee Conor
School for Field Studies, Center for Sustainable Development Studies, 10 Federal St, Suite 24, Salem, Massachusetts 01970-3876, USA.
Rev Biol Trop. 2006 Jun;54(2):415-21. doi: 10.15517/rbt.v54i2.13883.
Habitat fragmentation, along with other human-induced disturbances, increase the vulnerability of native habitats to be invaded by aggressive, ecologically released, exotic species. Syzigium jambos (L.) Alston (Myrtaceae, Rose Apple) is an important invader still spreading throughout Hawaii, the Antilles, Central and South America. This study examines the effects of S. jambos on plant understory diversity in a 25 ha Tropical Premontane Moist Forest in Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica, a protected watershed that supplies drinking water for several human communities. Our final objective is to develop a management strategy combining water protection with the preservation of a representative sample of the original plant diversity in the area. Thirty 2 x 2 m plots were distributed throughout the Municipal Forest maintaining a minimum of 10 m between plots, and 2 m from trails, to sample all understory seedlings and saplings of S. jambos, Coffea arabica (coffee) and tree seedlings. We found a clear dominance of S. jambos over all other understory plants. Of the total 1,285 sampled plants, S. jambos comprised 51%, coffee seedlings represented 14.78%, being the rest tree seedlings. Syzigium jambos had the highest density (5.46 plants/m2, S.D. = 6.44) compared to tree (3.67 plants/m2, S.D. = 3.44) and coffee seedlings (1.58 plants/m2, S.D. = 2.13). There was a highly significant negative relationship between the relative abundance of S. jambos and tree (r2 = 0.52, p < 0.00001) and coffee seedlings (r2 = 0.28, p < 0.002). The abundance of coffee seedlings did not affect the abundance of tree seedlings (r2 = 0.01, p < 0.58). Since the canopy of the Municipal Forest is relatively closed and composed of a monolayer of trees with almost no overlapping crowns, we found no relationship between canopy cover and the abundance of S. jambos. The height distribution indicated that the majority of S. jambos individuals were seedlings and saplings (height < or = 1.5 m), with only 4.6% classified as adults, (height > or = 2 m). The results show a clear role of S. jambos as an aggressive, invasive species within the Municipal Forest. This invasion is enhanced by both the ecological characteristics of the species and the fragmentation of the forest by coffee farming around the site. Among a variety of management possibilities, an ecosystem-level approach of manually removing S. jambos over time while replanting native species appears to be the preferred strategy, given the intended continued use of the Municipal Forest as a source of drinking water and as a representative sample of the original vegetation of the area.
栖息地破碎化,连同其他人为干扰,增加了原生栖息地被具有侵略性、生态释放的外来物种入侵的脆弱性。蒲桃(Syzigium jambos (L.) Alston,桃金娘科,蒲桃属)是一种重要的入侵物种,仍在夏威夷、安的列斯群岛、中美洲和南美洲蔓延。本研究调查了蒲桃对哥斯达黎加阿拉胡埃拉省阿特纳纳斯一片25公顷的热带山地湿润森林林下植物多样性的影响,这片森林是一个受保护的集水区,为多个人类社区提供饮用水。我们的最终目标是制定一种管理策略,将水资源保护与保护该地区具有代表性的原始植物多样性样本相结合。在整个市政森林中分布了30个2×2米的样地,样地之间至少保持10米的距离,与步道保持2米的距离,以对蒲桃、阿拉伯咖啡(咖啡)的所有林下幼苗和幼树以及树木幼苗进行采样。我们发现蒲桃在所有其他林下植物中明显占主导地位。在总共1285株采样植物中,蒲桃占51%,咖啡幼苗占14.78%,其余为树木幼苗。与树木(3.67株/平方米,标准差=3.44)和咖啡幼苗(1.58株/平方米,标准差=2.13)相比,蒲桃的密度最高(5.46株/平方米,标准差=6.44)。蒲桃的相对丰度与树木(r2 = 0.52,p < 0.00001)和咖啡幼苗(r2 = 0.28,p < 0.002)之间存在极显著的负相关关系。咖啡幼苗的丰度不影响树木幼苗的丰度(r2 = 0.01,p < 0.58)。由于市政森林的树冠相对封闭,由单层树木组成,树冠几乎没有重叠,我们发现树冠覆盖与蒲桃的丰度之间没有关系。高度分布表明,大多数蒲桃个体是幼苗和幼树(高度≤1.5米),只有4.6%被归类为成年树(高度≥2米)。结果表明,蒲桃在市政森林中是一种具有侵略性的入侵物种。该物种的生态特征以及该地点周围咖啡种植导致的森林破碎化都加剧了这种入侵。在各种管理可能性中,考虑到市政森林作为饮用水源和该地区原始植被代表性样本的预期持续用途,随着时间的推移手动清除蒲桃并重新种植本地物种的生态系统层面方法似乎是首选策略。