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Spatial patterns of light‐demanding tree species in the Yangambi rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo)

(2021) ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION. 11(24). p.18691-18707
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Abstract
Most Central African rainforests are characterized by a remarkable abundance of light-demanding canopy species: long-lived pioneers (LLP) and non-pioneer light demanders (NPLD). A popular explanation is that these forests are still recovering from intense slash-and-burn farming activities, which abruptly ended in the 19th century. This "human disturbance" hypothesis has never been tested against spatial distribution patterns of these light demanders. Here, we focus on the 28 most abundant LLP and NPLD from 250 one-ha plots distributed along eight parallel transects (similar to 50 km) in the Yangambi forest. Four species of short-lived pioneers (SLP) and a single abundant shade-tolerant species (Gilbertiodendron dewevrei) were used as reference because they are known to be strongly aggregated in recently disturbed patches (SLP) or along watercourses (G. dewevrei). Results show that SLP species are strongly aggregated with clear spatial autocorrelation of their diameter. This confirms that they colonized the patch following a one-time disturbance event. In contrast, LIP and NPLD species have random or weakly aggregated distribution, mostly without spatial autocorrelation of their diameter. This does not unambiguously confirm the "human disturbance" hypothesis. Alternatively, their abundance might be explained by their deciduousness, which gave them a competitive advantage during long-term drying of the late Holocene. Additionally, a canonical correspondence analysis showed that the observed LLP and NPLD distributions are not explained by environmental variables, strongly contrasting with the results for the reference species G. dewevrei, which is clearly aggregated along watercourses. We conclude that the abundance of LLP and NPLD species in Yangambi cannot be unambiguously attributed to past human disturbances or environmental variables. An alternative explanation is that present-day forest composition is a result of adaptation to late-Holocene drying. However, results are inconclusive and additional data are needed to confirm this alternative hypothesis.
Keywords
Nature and Landscape Conservation, Ecology, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, African forest ecology, forest composition, light-demanding species, spatial analysis, Yangambi biosphere reserve, CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS, ENVIRONMENTAL HETEROGENEITY, BIOTIC INTERACTIONS, SOIL NUTRIENTS, TROPICAL TREES, DROUGHT, DISTRIBUTIONS, DISPERSAL, COMMUNITY, PLANT, CBCE

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MLA
Luambua, Nestor K., et al. “Spatial Patterns of Light‐demanding Tree Species in the Yangambi Rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo).” ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, vol. 11, no. 24, 2021, pp. 18691–707, doi:10.1002/ece3.8443.
APA
Luambua, N. K., Hubau, W., Salako, K. V., Amani, C., Bonyoma, B., Musepena, D., … Hardy, O. J. (2021). Spatial patterns of light‐demanding tree species in the Yangambi rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo). ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 11(24), 18691–18707. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8443
Chicago author-date
Luambua, Nestor K., Wannes Hubau, Kolawolé Valère Salako, Christian Amani, Bernard Bonyoma, Donatien Musepena, Mélissa Rousseau, et al. 2021. “Spatial Patterns of Light‐demanding Tree Species in the Yangambi Rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo).” ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 11 (24): 18691–707. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8443.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Luambua, Nestor K., Wannes Hubau, Kolawolé Valère Salako, Christian Amani, Bernard Bonyoma, Donatien Musepena, Mélissa Rousseau, Nils Bourland, Hippolyte S.M. Nshimba, Corneille Ewango, Hans Beeckman, and Olivier J. Hardy. 2021. “Spatial Patterns of Light‐demanding Tree Species in the Yangambi Rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo).” ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 11 (24): 18691–18707. doi:10.1002/ece3.8443.
Vancouver
1.
Luambua NK, Hubau W, Salako KV, Amani C, Bonyoma B, Musepena D, et al. Spatial patterns of light‐demanding tree species in the Yangambi rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo). ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION. 2021;11(24):18691–707.
IEEE
[1]
N. K. Luambua et al., “Spatial patterns of light‐demanding tree species in the Yangambi rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo),” ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, vol. 11, no. 24, pp. 18691–18707, 2021.
@article{8738463,
  abstract     = {{Most Central African rainforests are characterized by a remarkable abundance of light-demanding canopy species: long-lived pioneers (LLP) and non-pioneer light demanders (NPLD). A popular explanation is that these forests are still recovering from intense slash-and-burn farming activities, which abruptly ended in the 19th century. This "human disturbance" hypothesis has never been tested against spatial distribution patterns of these light demanders. Here, we focus on the 28 most abundant LLP and NPLD from 250 one-ha plots distributed along eight parallel transects (similar to 50 km) in the Yangambi forest. Four species of short-lived pioneers (SLP) and a single abundant shade-tolerant species (Gilbertiodendron dewevrei) were used as reference because they are known to be strongly aggregated in recently disturbed patches (SLP) or along watercourses (G. dewevrei). Results show that SLP species are strongly aggregated with clear spatial autocorrelation of their diameter. This confirms that they colonized the patch following a one-time disturbance event. In contrast, LIP and NPLD species have random or weakly aggregated distribution, mostly without spatial autocorrelation of their diameter. This does not unambiguously confirm the "human disturbance" hypothesis. Alternatively, their abundance might be explained by their deciduousness, which gave them a competitive advantage during long-term drying of the late Holocene. Additionally, a canonical correspondence analysis showed that the observed LLP and NPLD distributions are not explained by environmental variables, strongly contrasting with the results for the reference species G. dewevrei, which is clearly aggregated along watercourses. We conclude that the abundance of LLP and NPLD species in Yangambi cannot be unambiguously attributed to past human disturbances or environmental variables. An alternative explanation is that present-day forest composition is a result of adaptation to late-Holocene drying. However, results are inconclusive and additional data are needed to confirm this alternative hypothesis.}},
  author       = {{Luambua, Nestor K. and Hubau, Wannes and Salako, Kolawolé Valère and Amani, Christian and Bonyoma, Bernard and Musepena, Donatien and Rousseau, Mélissa and Bourland, Nils and Nshimba, Hippolyte S.M. and Ewango, Corneille and Beeckman, Hans and Hardy, Olivier J.}},
  issn         = {{2045-7758}},
  journal      = {{ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION}},
  keywords     = {{Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology,Evolution,Behavior and Systematics,African forest ecology,forest composition,light-demanding species,spatial analysis,Yangambi biosphere reserve,CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS,ENVIRONMENTAL HETEROGENEITY,BIOTIC INTERACTIONS,SOIL NUTRIENTS,TROPICAL TREES,DROUGHT,DISTRIBUTIONS,DISPERSAL,COMMUNITY,PLANT,CBCE}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{24}},
  pages        = {{18691--18707}},
  title        = {{Spatial patterns of light‐demanding tree species in the Yangambi rainforest (Democratic Republic of Congo)}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8443}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}

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