Land-use history and forest regeneration in the Cayey Mountains, Puerto Rico

Pascarella JB, Aide TM, Serrano MI, Zimmerman JK


ECOSYSTEMS
3 (3): 217-228 MAY-JUN 2000

Abstract:
Although deforestation continues to be a major threat to tropical biodiversity, abandonment of agricultural land in Puerto Rico provides an opportunity to study long-term patterns of secondary forest regeneration. Using aerial photographs from 1937, 1967, and 1995, we determined land-use history for 2443 ha in the Cayey Mountains. Pastures were the dominant land cover in 1937 and <20% of the area was classified as forest. Between 1937 and 1995, forest cover increased to 62% due to widespread abandonment of agriculture. To examine the effect of historic land use on current forest structure and species composition, we sampled secondary forests in 24 abandoned pastures, 9 abandoned coffee plantations and 4 old-growth forest sites. Sites were located on two soil types along an elevational gradient (125-710 m) and included a chronosequence from 4 to over 80 years old. After 25-30 years, basal area and species richness in secondary forest sites derived from abandoned pastures and coffee plantations were similar to old-growth forest sites. The species composition of secondary forests derived from abandoned pastures and coffee plantations remained distinct from old-growth forest. In addition to historic land use, age and elevation were important environmental variables explaining variation in secondary forest species composition. Nonindigenous species were common in recently abandoned pastures and coffee plantations, but their importance declined in the older sites. This study demonstrates that secondary forests on private land can be an important component of the conservation of tropical tree biodiversity.

Author Keywords:
biodiversity, chronosequence, coffee plantation, land use history, non-metric multidimensional scaling, pasture, Puerto Rico, secondary succession, tropical forests

KeyWords Plus:
TROPICAL RAIN-FOREST, EASTERN AMAZONIA, SUCCESSION, SECONDARY, RECOVERY, PASTURES, CHRONOSEQUENCE, MANAGEMENT, HURRICANE, PATTERNS

Addresses:
Pascarella JB, Valdosta State Univ, Dept Biol, Valdosta, GA 31698 USA
Univ Puerto Rico, Dept Biol, San Juan, PR 00931 USA
Univ Puerto Rico, Inst Trop Ecosyst Studies, San Juan, PR 00936 USA

Publisher:
SPRINGER VERLAG, 175 FIFTH AVE, NEW YORK, NY 10010 USA

IDS Number:
327CB

ISSN:
1432-9840