Architectural Stratification and Woody Species Diversity of a Subtropical Forest Grown in a Limestone Habitat in Okinawa Island, Japan
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32799
Architectural Stratification and Woody Species Diversity of a Subtropical Forest Grown in a Limestone Habitat in Okinawa Island, Japan

Authors: S. M. Feroz, K. Yoshimura, A. Hagihara

Abstract:

The forest stand consisted of four layers. The species composition between the third and the bottom layers was almost similar, whereas it was almost exclusive between the top and the lower three layers. The values of Shannon-s index H' and Pielou-s index J ' tended to increase from the bottom layer upward, except for H' -value of the top layer. The values of H' and J ' were 4.21 bit and 0.73, respectively, for the total stand. High woody species diversity of the forest depended on large trees in the upper layers, which trend was different from a subtropical evergreen broadleaf forest grown in silicate habitat in the northern part of Okinawa Island. The spatial distribution of trees was overlapped between the third and the bottom layers, whereas it was independent or slightly exclusive between the top and the lower three layers. Mean tree weight of each layer decreased from the top toward the bottom layer, whereas the corresponding tree density increased from the top downward. This relationship was analogous to the process of self-thinning plant populations.

Keywords: Canopy multi-layering, limestone habitat, mean tree weight-density relationship, species diversity, subtropical forest.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1334586

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1178

References:


[1] E. O. Wilson (ed.), Biodiversity. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1988.
[2] Y. It├┤, Diversity of forest tree species in Yanbaru, the northern part of Okinawa Island. Plant Ecology, Volume 133, 1997, 125-133.
[3] J. B. Hall, M. D. Swaine, Classification and ecology of closed-canopy forest in Ghana. Journal of Ecology, Volume 64, 1976, 913-951.
[4] S. M. Feroz, A. Hagihara, M. Yokota, Stand structure and woody species diversity in relation to the stand stratification in a subtropical evergreen broadleaf forest, Okinawa Island. Journal of Plant Research, Volume 119, 2006, 293-301.
[5] M. A. Huston, Biological diversity. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994.
[6] T. C. Whitmore, An introduction to tropical rain forests. Oxford University Press, New York, 1998.
[7] W. Huang, V. Pohjonen, S. Johansson, M. Nashanda, M. I. L. Katigula, O. Luukkanen, Species diversity, forest structure and species composition in Tanzanian tropical forests. Forest Ecology and Management, Volume 173, 2003, 11-24.
[8] T. Kira, Forest ecosystems of east and southest Aisa in a global perspective. Ecological Research, Volume 6, 1991, 185-200.
[9] M. Ohsawa, Latitudinal comparison of altitudinal changes in forest structure, leaf-type, and species richness in humid monsoon Asia. Vegetatio, Volume 121, 1995, 3-10.
[10] K. Hozumi, Studies on the frequency distribution of the weight of individual trees in a forest stand. V. The M-w diagram for various types of forest stands. Japanese Journal of Ecology, Volume 25, 1975, 123-131.
[11] J. P. Kimmins, Forest ecology. Pearson Education Inc, NJ, 2004.
[12] T. Yamakura, An empirical approach to the analysis of forest stratification. I. Proposed graphical method derived by using an empirical distribution function. Botanical Magazine, Tokyo, Volume 100, 1987, 109-128.
[13] M. R. Roberts, F. S. Gilliam, Patterns and mechanisms of plant diversity in forested ecosystems: implications for forest management. Ecological Application, Volume 5, 1995, 969-977.
[14] X. Xu, E. Hirata, Y. Tokashiki, T. Shinohara, Structure and species diversity of subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest in northern Okinawa Island, Japan. Journal of Forest Research, Volume 6, 2001, 203-210.
[15] T. Enoki, Microtopography and distribution of canopy trees in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest in the northern part of Okinawa Island, Japan. Ecological Research, Volume 18, 2003, 103-113.
[16] L. Alhamd, A. Hagihara, Litterfall of a subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest in Okinawa Island, Japan. Tropics, Volume 13, 2004, 255-268.
[17] T. Enoki, A. Abe, Saplings distribution in relation to topography and canopy openness in an evergreen broad-leaved forest. Plant Ecology, Volume 173, 2004, 283-291.
[18] Y. Kubota, H. Murata, K. Kikuzawa, Effects of topographic heterogeneity on tree species richness and stand dynamics in a subtropical forest in Okinawa Island, southern Japan. Journal of Ecology, Volume 92, 2004, 230-240.
[19] T. Kira, Forest vegetation of Japan. Introduction. in: T. Shidei and T. Kira (eds.) Primary productivity of Japanese forests. Productivity of terrestrial communities. University of Tokyo Press, Tokyo, 1977, 1-9/14.
[20] S. Hatusima, Flora of the Ryukyus. Okinawa Biological Education, Naha, 1990.
[21] K. Hozumi, Studies on the frequency distribution of the weight of individual trees in a forest stand. III. A beta-type distribution. Japanese Journal of Ecology, Volume 21, 1971, 152-167.
[22] M. Evans, N. Hastings, B. Peacock, Statistical distributions. Wiley, New York, 2000.
[23] H. S. Horn, Measurement of "overlap" in comparative ecological studies. The American Naturalist, Volume 100, 1966, 419-424.
[24] S. Kimoto, Some quantitative analysis on the Chrysomelid fauna of the Ryukyu Archipelago. Esakia, Volume 6, 1967, 27-54.
[25] M. Lloyd, Mean crowding. Journal of Animal Ecology, Volume 36, 1967, 1-30.
[26] S. Iwao, Analysis of spatial association between two species based on the interspecies mean crowding. Researches on Population Ecology, Volume 18, 1977, 243-260.
[27] R. H. MacArthur, J. W. MacArthur, On bird species diversity. Ecology, Volume 42, 1961, 594-598.
[28] E. C. Pielou, An introduction to mathematical ecology. Wiley, New York, 1961.
[29] K. Shinozaki, T. Kira, The C-D rule, its theory and practical uses (Intraspecific competition among higher plants X). Journal of Biology, Osaka City University, Volume 12, 1961, 69-82.
[30] T. Kira, H. Ogawa, Assessment of primary production in tropical and equatorial forests. in: Productivity of forest ecosystems. Unesco, Paris, 1971, 309-321.
[31] A. Hagihara, Time-trajectory of mean phytomass and density in self-thinning plant populations. Bulletin of the Faculty of Science, University of the Ryukyus, Volume 70, 2000, 99-112.