This study aimed to describe and compare the interannual changes in the diversity and population structure of herbaceous plants in an anthropogenic area that has been regenerating for 15 years and to identify the similarities and differences in the biological attributes of the community compared with the characteristics of a regenerating conserved area. In total, 105 plots measuring 1 m(2) were established. In each plot, the herbaceous plants were identified, and their height and stem diameter were measured for two consecutive years. The herbaceous flora of the anthropogenic area was represented by 86 species in 70 genera and 27 families, and there were no significant differences in the average richness between years. The conserved area was represented by 71 species in 63 genera and 35 families, and there was a significant difference in the total richness between areas and between years, except when comparing the richness between the conserved area and the anthropogenic area during the second year. Considering both the anthropogenic and conserved areas, 123 herbaceous species were listed, and the similarity between areas was 60 %. For the anthropogenic area, the floristic similarity between years was 95 %, and in the fragment of the conserved area, the similarity was 74 %. The diversity and density were significantly different between years and between areas. Given these results, this study suggests that 15 years of natural regeneration for the caatinga is not sufficient to reestablish its native flora with respect to its herbaceous component.
Variations in leaf morphometry and in diameter and height growth of plants may occur due to changes in light and temperature conditions of the forest in order to compensate the stress in the habitat. In this study, we examine the relationship of seedling and juvenile size and leaf area of woody species in forests of different ages ([55 and 19 years) in northeastern Brazil. A total of 600 individuals of four species, seedlings and juveniles that survived a rainy season were evaluated. Seedlings and juveniles of Croton blanchetianus Baill, Poincianella pyramidalis (Tul.) L. P. Queiroz, Myracrodruon urundeuva Allemão and Commiphora leptophloeos (Mart.) J.B. Gillett were measured for height and stem diameter in the beginning of the rainy season of 2014. One leaf of each individual was collected in the beginning of the rainy season. Leaves were photographed, and leaf area was measured. Differences in height, diameter and leaf area between forests and the existence of a relationship of diameter and height to leaf area were examined. Leaf area and seedling and juvenile size of C. blanchetianus and C. leptophloeos decreased as succession progressed. However, this was not observed for seedlings of P. pyramidalis and juveniles of M. urundeuva. Leaf area explained 7-26% of the variation in size of individuals in the young forest and 11-39% of the variation in size of individuals in the mature forest. Despite variations in leaf area, significant changes in growth rate were not found with the increase in forest age for most ontogenetic stages and species.
In the arid and semiarid environments of the world, microhabitats serve as models for the structure of vegetation communities. The goal of this study was to identify differences in the structures of the herbaceous communities growing on a crystalline substrate and those growing on a sedimentary substrate in a semiarid region of northeastern Brazil. One hundred 1 × 1 m plots were established in each area for quantitative sampling, with 69 species recorded in the crystalline area and 76 in the sedimentary area. The average plant density was higher in the sedimentary area, and average diameters and heights were greater in the crystalline area. The families and species with a high Importance Value Index (IVI) and a high Mixed Ecological Value Index (MEVI) differed between the areas. Of the species with high densities, only four were found in both areas. Shannon-Weiner diversity index values in the crystalline (2.96 nats/ind.-1 ) and sedimentary (2.89 nats/ind. ) areas were similar. Evenness values on both substrates were also similar (0.72 and 0.71 in the crystalline and sedimentary areas, respectively). This study shows that variations in plant establishment conditions between crystalline and sedimentary areas in a semiarid region of northeastern Brazil should be considered as structure-modeling factors for the herbaceous community.Keywords: dry forest, phytosociology, herb, soil, caatinga, microhabitat.
Variação espacial na estrutura da comunidade herbácea em uma região semiárida do Nordeste do Brasil ResumoNos ambientes áridos e semiáridos do mundo, os micro-habitats modelam a estrutura das comunidades vegetais. O objetivo deste estudo foi identificar diferenças nas estruturas das comunidades herbáceas instaladas sobre o solo do embasamento cristalino e a bacia sedimentar em uma região semiárida do Nordeste do Brasil. Foram estabelecidas 100 parcelas de 1 × 1 m em cada área para amostragem das comunidades. Foram registradas 69 espécies na área cristalina e 76 na área sedimentar. A densidade média das plantas foi maior na área sedimentar e os diâmetros e as alturas médias foram maiores na área cristalina. As famílias e as espécies com maior Índice ) e sedimentar (2,89 nats/ind.-1 ) foram semelhantes. Os valores de equabilidade, em ambas as áreas, também foram semelhantes (0,72 e 0,71, nas áreas cristalina e sedimentar, respectivamente). Este estudo mostra que as variações nas condições de estabelecimento das plantas entre áreas cristalinas e sedimentares, em uma região semiárida do Nordeste do Brasil, devem ser consideradas como um fator modelador da estrutura das comunidades herbáceas.
Variation in annual rainfall is considered the most important factor influencing population dynamics in dry environments. However, different factors may control population dynamics in different microhabitats. This study recognizes that microhabitat variation may attenuate the influence of climatic seasonality on the population dynamics of herbaceous species in dry forest (Caatinga) areas of Brazil. We evaluated the influence of three microhabitats (flat, rocky and riparian) on the population dynamics of four herbaceous species (Delilia biflora, Commelina obliqua, Phaseolus peduncularis and Euphorbia heterophylla) in a Caatinga (dry forest) fragment at the Experimental Station of the Agronomic Research Institute of Pernambuco in Brazil, over a period of three years. D. biflora, C. obliqua and P. peduncularis were found in all microhabitats, but they were present at low densities in the riparian microhabitat. There was no record of E. heterophylla in the riparian microhabitat. Population size, mortality rates and natality rates varied over time in each microhabitat. This study indicates that different establishment conditions influenced the population size and occurrence of the four species, and it confirms that microhabitat can attenuate the effect of drought stress on mortality during the dry season, but the strength of this attenuator role may vary with time and species.Keywords: demography, density, herb, mortality, natality, spatial variation.A influência dos microhabitats sobre a dinâmica de populações de quatro espécies herbáceas em uma área semiárida no nordeste do Brasil
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