2004
DOI: 10.1590/s0044-59672004000300009
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Tree species diversity in a seasonally-dry forest: the case of the Pinkaití site, in the Kayapó Indigenous Area, Southeastern limits of the Amazon

Abstract: This study investigates patterns of forest structure and tree species diversity in an anthropogenic palm grove and undisturbed areas at the seasonally-dry Pinkaití research station, in the Kayapó Indigenous Area. This site, managed by the Conservation International do Brasil, is the most southeastern site floristically surveyed in the Amazon until now. The secondary and a nearby undisturbed forest were sampled in a group of 52 floristic plots of 0.0625-ha (25x25-m) where all trees with DBH $ 10 cm were measure… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Species diversity recorded at Marajoara (103 ± 2.2 ha -1 >10 cm diameter) was nearly identical to values reported by Baider (2000) and Salm (2004) from slightly wetter forests 185 km west of the study area. While the two sites shared many of the same species, patterns of dominance were quite different.…”
Section: Forest Composition and Structuresupporting
confidence: 87%
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“…Species diversity recorded at Marajoara (103 ± 2.2 ha -1 >10 cm diameter) was nearly identical to values reported by Baider (2000) and Salm (2004) from slightly wetter forests 185 km west of the study area. While the two sites shared many of the same species, patterns of dominance were quite different.…”
Section: Forest Composition and Structuresupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Patches of vine forest may coalesce into extensive tangled stands. Baider (2000) and Salm (2004) provide floristic descriptions from sites ca. 200 km west of Marajoara.…”
Section: The Study Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The results of these studies show that the large arborescent palm A. maripa are generally rare at undisturbed areas of the Pinkaití (2 palms ha -1 ), but abundant in naturally disturbed (12 palms ha -1 ) (Salm 2005) and dominant at a patch of secondary forests within the study site (53 palms ha -1 ) (Salm 2004a). These findings support the proposed notion of large arborescent palms as light demanding successional species that depend on large events of disturbance to become ecologically dominant -a view that, although disputed (Svenning 1999), is largely accepted (Kahn 1986, de Granville 1992, Kahn & de Granville 1992, and essential to our model.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Additionally, the studied patch of secondary forest seems to be in an advanced stage of regeneration, having senescent palm populations (Salm 2004b) and floristically resembling the pristine areas of the Pinkaití Research Station (Salm 2004a). The successional nature of the palm grove is in fact evident on the structure of this forest patch.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 90%
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