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1 June 2003 Use-history Effects on Structure and Flora of Caatinga
Israel M. Pereira, Leonaldo A. Andrade, Everardo S. B V. Sampaio, Maria Regina V. Barbosa
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Abstract

Floristic composition and vegetation structure of plants 3 cm stem diameter or greater were compared at four sites in the Agreste of Paraíba, Brazil: (1) little disturbed for five decades (LD); (2) grazed fragment, selectively logged 16 years before sampling (GF); (3) naturally regrowing for 30 years after 39 years of agriculture (OR); and (4) naturally regrowing for 20 years after 35 years of agriculture plus 15 years of pasture (NR). Cattle graze frequently in the last three sites but very seldom in LD. The little disturbed site had more species (53) than the other three sites (36, 25, and 11 species in GF, OG, and NG, respectively) and also more (3253, 2780, 2780, and 2115 plants/ha) and larger plants (34.8, 26.8, 18.6, and 7.8 m2/ha), including taller tree species (up to 15 m) absent in the other sites (maximum height: 14, 6, and 5 m). Differences were striking in relation to NR, the site with longer use and shorter regrowth period, which was strongly dominated by only two species: Mimosa tenuiflora (73% relative density and 81% basal area) and Piptadenia stipulacea (21% relative density and 16% basal area). These results indicate that abandoned agricultural sites may take several decades to reestablish vegetation similar to the original.

Israel M. Pereira, Leonaldo A. Andrade, Everardo S. B V. Sampaio, and Maria Regina V. Barbosa "Use-history Effects on Structure and Flora of Caatinga," BIOTROPICA 35(2), 154-165, (1 June 2003). https://doi.org/10.1646/01160
Published: 1 June 2003
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
Basal area
Brazil
plant density
plant height
regeneration
tropical deciduous forest
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