Changes in rain forest tree diversity, dominance and rarity across a seasonality gradient in the Western Ghats, India
Corresponding Author
Priya Davidar
Salim Ali School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Pondicherry, India
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic of Panama
Priya Davidar, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Box 2072, Balboa, Republic of Panama. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this authorJean Philippe Puyravaud
Centre ValBio, PB 33 Ranomafana, Ifanadiana, Fianarantsoa, Madagascar
Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, USA
Search for more papers by this authorEgbert G. Leigh Jr
Salim Ali School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Pondicherry, India
Search for more papers by this authorCorresponding Author
Priya Davidar
Salim Ali School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Pondicherry, India
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic of Panama
Priya Davidar, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Box 2072, Balboa, Republic of Panama. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this authorJean Philippe Puyravaud
Centre ValBio, PB 33 Ranomafana, Ifanadiana, Fianarantsoa, Madagascar
Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, USA
Search for more papers by this authorEgbert G. Leigh Jr
Salim Ali School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Pondicherry, India
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
Aim We assessed the effects of latitude, altitude and climate on the alpha diversity of rain forest trees in the Western Ghats (WG) of India. We tested whether stem densities, dominance, the prevalence of rarity, and the proportion of understorey trees are significantly correlated with alpha diversity.
Location The WG is a chain of mountains c. 1600 km in length, running parallel to the western coast of the Indian peninsula from above 8° N to almost 21° N latitude. Wet forests occur as a narrow strip in regions with heavy rainfall.
Methods To assess tree diversity we used data from 40 small plots, < 1 ha in area, where all trees ≥ 3.18 cm d.b.h. had been inventoried. These plots were distributed across 7 latitudinal degrees and at elevations between 200 and 1550 m. Fisher's alpha was used as a measure of diversity. For each plot, the proportion of trees belonging to the understorey, the proportion of trees belonging to the most abundant species in the plot, as a measure of dominance, and the proportionate representation of singletons, as a measure of rarity, were estimated, and correlated with Fisher's alpha, elevation, rainfall and seasonality.
Results Annual rainfall and seasonality increased towards the north, but were not significantly correlated. Tree diversity increased significantly with decreasing seasonality. Tree diversity was not significantly correlated with stem density or with the proportion of understorey tree species, but was significantly correlated with tree dominance and rarity. Dominance increased and rarity significantly decreased with increasing seasonality.
Main conclusions This study demonstrates that seasonality influences rain forest tree diversity in the WG of India. The relationship between alpha diversity, dominance and rarity lends correlative support for the Janzen–Connell pest pressure hypothesis.
Supporting Information
Appendix S1. Location and other information pertaining to 40 inventory plots used for the analysis.
Filename | Description |
---|---|
JBI_1165_sm_SA1.doc103 KB | Supporting info item |
Please note: The publisher is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing content) should be directed to the corresponding author for the article.
References
- Augspurger, C.K. (1983) Seed dispersal of the tropical tree, Platypodium elegans and the escape of its seedlings from fungal pathogens. Journal of Ecology, 71, 759–771.
- Augspurger, C.K. (1984) Seedling survival of tropical tree species: interactions of dispersal distance, light-gaps, and pathogens. Ecology, 65, 1705–1712.
- Ayyappan, N. & Parthasarathy, N. (1999) Biodiversity inventory of trees in a large-scale permanent plot of tropical evergreen forest at Varagaliar, Anamalais, Western Ghats, India. Biodiversity and Conservation, 8, 1533–1554.
- Clinebell, R.R. II, Phillips, O.L., Gentry, A.H., Stark, N. & Zuuring, H. (1995) Prediction of Neotropical tree and liana species richness from soil and climatic data. Biodiversity and Conservation, 4, 56–90.
- Coley, P.D. & Barone, J.A. (1996) Herbivory and plant defenses in tropical forests. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 27, 305–335.
- Condit, R., Hubbell, S.P. & Foster, R.B. (1992) Recruitment near conspecific adults and maintenance of tree and shrub diversity in a Neotropical forest. American Naturalist, 140, 261–286.
- Condit, R., Hubbell, S.P., LaFrankie, J.V., Sukumar, R., Manokaran, S., Foster, R.B. & Ashton, P.S. (1996) Species–area and species–individual relationships for tropical trees: a comparison of three 50-ha plots. Journal of Ecology, 84, 549–562.
- Connell, J.H. (1971) On the role of natural enemies in preventing competitive exclusion in some marine animals and in rain forest trees. Dynamics of numbers in populations (ed. by P.J. Boer and G. Gradwell), pp. 298–312. Center for Agricultural Publication and Documentation, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
- Elouard, C., Pascal, J.P., Pelissier, R., Ramesh, B.R., Houllier, F., Durand, M., Aravajy, S., Moravie, M.A. & Gimaret-Carpentier, C. (1997) Monitoring the structure and dynamics of a dense moist evergreen forest in the Western Ghats (Kodagu district, Karnataka, India). Tropical Ecology, 38, 193–214.
- Fisher, R.A., Corbet, A.S. & Williams, C.B. (1943) The relation between the number of species and the number of individuals in a random sample of an animal population. Journal of Animal Ecology, 12, 42–57.
-
Gamble, J.S. &
Fischer, C.E.C. (19151936) Flora of the Presidency of Madras, Vols 1–111. Adlard and Son Ltd, London.
10.5962/bhl.title.21628 Google Scholar
- Garrigues, J.P. (1999) Action anthropique sur la dynamique des formations végétales au sud de l'Inde (Ghâts occidentaux, Etat du Karnataka, District de Shimoga). Unpublished PhD Thesis, Université Claude Bernard – Lyon I, Villeurbanne.
- Gentry, A.H. (1988) Changes in plant community diversity and floristic composition on environmental and geographical gradients. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 75, 1–34.
- Gilbert, G.S., Hubbell, S.P. & Foster, R.B. (1994) Density and distance-to-adult effects of a canker disease of trees in a moist tropical forest. Oecologia, 98, 100–108.
- Givnish, T.J. (1999) On the causes of gradients in tropical tree diversity. Journal of Ecology, 87, 193–210.
- Gunnell, Y. (1997) Relief and climate in south Asia: the influence of the Western Ghats on the current climate pattern of peninsular India. International Journal of Climatology, 17, 1169–1182.
- Harms, K.E., Wright, S.J., Calderon, O., Hernandez, A. & Herre, E.A. (2000) Pervasive density-dependent recruitment enhances seedling diversity in a tropical forest. Nature, 404, 493–495.
- Hille Ris Lambers, J., Clark, J.S. & Beckage, B. (2002) Density-dependent mortality and the latitudinal gradient in species diversity. Nature, 417, 732–735.
- Howe, H.F., Schupp, E.W. & Westley, L.C. (1985) Early consequences of seed dispersal for a Neotropical tree (Virola surinamensis). Ecology, 66, 781–791.
- Huston, M.A. (1994) Biological diversity: the coexistence of species on changing landscapes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
- Janzen, D.H. (1970) Herbivores and the number of tree species in tropical forests. American Naturalist, 104, 501–528.
-
Leigh, E.G. Jr (1999) Tropical forest ecology: a view from Barro Colorado Island. Oxford University Press, NY.
10.1093/oso/9780195096026.001.0001 Google Scholar
- Lieberman, D., Lieberman, M., Peralta, R. & Hartshorn, G.S. (1996) Tropical forest structure and composition on a large-scale altitudinal gradient in Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology, 84, 137–152.
- Matthew, K.M. (1999) The Flora of the Palni Hills, S. India. The Rapinat Herbarium, Tiruchirapalli, India.
- Morley, R.J. (2000) Origin and evolution of tropical rain forests. Wiley, New York.
- Myers, N. (1990) The biodiversity challenge: expanded hot-spot analysis. The Environmentalist, 10, 243–256.
- Okuda, T., Kachi, N., Yap, S.K. & Manokaran, N. (1997) Tree distribution pattern and fate of juveniles in a lowland tropical rain forest – implications for regeneration and maintenance of species diversity. Plant Ecology, 131, 155–171.
- Parthasarathy, N. (1999) Tree diversity and distribution in undisturbed and human impacted sites of tropical wet evergreen forest in Southern Western Ghats, India. Biodiversity and Conservation, 8, 1365–1381.
- Parthasarathy, N. (2001) Changes in forest composition and structure in three sites of tropical evergreen forest around Sengaltheri, Western Ghats. Current Science, 80, 389–393.
- Parthasarathy, N. & Karthikeyan, R. (1997) Biodiversity and population density of woody species in a tropical evergreen forest in Courtallam reserve forest, Western Ghats, India. Tropical Ecology, 38, 297–306.
- Pascal, J.P. (1982) Bioclimates of the Western Ghats on 1/500,000, 2 sheets. Hors Serie No. 17, Institut Français de Pondichéry, India.
- Pascal, J.P. (1988) Wet evergreen forests of the Western Ghats of India: ecology, structure, floristic composition and succession. Institut Français de Pondichery, India, 345 pp.
- Pascal, J.P. & Pelissier, R. (1996) Structure and floristic composition of a tropical evergreen forest in Southern India. Journal of Tropical Ecology, 12, 195–218.
- Pascal, J.P. & Ramesh, B.R. (1987) A field key to the trees and lianas of the evergreen forests of the Western Ghats, India. Institut Français de Pondichéry, India.
- Peters, H.A. (2003) Neighbour-regulated mortality: the influence of positive and negative density-dependence on tree populations in species-rich tropical forests. Ecology Letters, 6, 757–765.
- Peterschmitt, E. (1993) Les couvertures ferralitiques des Ghâts occidentaux en Inde du Sud: caractères generaux sur l'escarpement et dégradation par hydromorphie sur les revers. Publications du Département d'Ecologie 32, Institut Français de Pondichery, India.
- Phillips, O.L., Hall, P., Gentry, A.H., Sawyer, S.A. & Vásquez, R. (1994) Dynamics and species richness of tropical rain forests. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 91, 2805–2809.
- Pitman, N.C.A., Terborgh, J.W., Silman, M.R., Nuñez, P.V., Neill, D.A., Cerón, C.E., Palacios, W.A. & Aulestia, M. (2002) A comparison of tree species diversity in two upper Amazonian forests. Ecology, 83, 3210–3224.
- Puyravaud, J.P. & Garrigues, J.P. (2002) L'agriculteur ou la forêt? Systèmes agraires, prélèvements et conséquences écologiques sous la crête des Ghâts(district de Shimoga). L'homme et la forêt en Inde du Sud. Modes de gestion et symbolisme de la forêt dans les Ghâts occidentaux (ed. by J. Pouchepadass and J.P. Puyravaud), pp. 167–234. Institut français de Pondichéry et Karthala, Pondichéry, Paris.
- Puyravaud, J.P., Pascal, J.P. & Dufour, C. (1994) Ecotone structure as an indicator of changing forest-savanna boundaries (Linganamakki region, southern India). Journal of Biogeography, 21, 581–593.
- Puyravaud, S.J., Dufour, C. & Aravajy, S. (2003) Rain forest expansion mediated by successional processes in vegetation thickets in the Western Ghats of India. Journal of Biogeography, 30, 1067–1080.
- Ramachandran, G. & Banerjee, A.K. (1983) The subdivisional rainfall distribution across the Western Ghats during the South West monsoon season. Mausam, 34, 179–184.
- Ramesh, B.R., Pascal, J.P. & Nouguier, C. (1997) Atlas of endemics of the Western Ghats (India): distribution of tree species in the evergreen and semi-evergreen forest. Institut Français de Pondichéry, India.
- Saldanha, C.J. (1984) Flora of Karnataka. Oxford and IBH Publishing Co., New Delhi.
- Saldanha, C.J. & Nicholson, D. (1976) Flora of Hassan District, Karnataka, India. Oxford and IBH Publishing Co., New Delhi.
- Sinha, A. (1990) Seed dispersal ecology and recruitment patterns in Lophopetalum wightianum, a rain forest tree in the Western Ghats. MS thesis, Pondicherry University, India.
- SPSS Inc. (2000) Systat 2000, Version 10. SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA.
- ter Steege, H., Pitman, N.C.A., Sabatier, S., Castellanos, H., Van der Hout, P., Daly, D.C., Silveira, M., Phillips, O., Vasquez, R., Van Andel, T., Duivenvoorden, J., de Oliveira, A.A., Ek, R.C., Lilwah, R., Thomas, R.A., Van Essen, J., Baider, C., Maas, P.J.M., Mori, S., Terborgh, J., Nuňez-Vargas, P.V., Mogollón, H. & Morawetz, W. (2003) A spatial model of tree alpha-diversity and density for the Amazon Region. Biodiversity and Conservation, 12, 2255–2276.
- Wills, C.R. & Condit, R. (1999) Similar non-random processes maintain diversity in two tropical rain forests. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 266, 1445–1452.
- Wolda, H. (1983) Spatial and temporal variation in abundance in tropical animals. Tropical rain forest: ecology and management (ed. by S.L. Sutton, T.C. Whitmore and A.C. Chadwick), pp. 93–105. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.
- Wolda, H. (1988) Insect seasonality: why? Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 19, 1–18.
- Wong, M., Wright, S.J., Hubbell, S.P. & Foster, R.B. (1990) The spatial pattern and reproductive consequences of outbreak defoliation in Quararibea asterolepis, a tropical tree. Journal of Ecology, 78, 579–588.
- Wright, S.J. (1992) Seasonal drought, soil fertility, and the species density of tropical forest plant communities. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 7, 260–263.
- Wright, S.J. (2002) Plant diversity in tropical forests: a review of mechanisms of species coexistence. Oecologia, 13, 1–4.