Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-12T20:30:05.170Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

24 - Forest recovery in the humid tropics: changes in vegetation structure, nutrient pools and the hydrological cycle

from Part III - Forest disturbance, conversion and recovery

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2010

D. Hölscher
Affiliation:
Institute of Silviculture, University of Göttingen, Buesgenweg 1, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany
J. Mackensen
Affiliation:
Division of Policy Development and Law, United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP), P.O. Box 30552, Nairobi, Kenya
J. -M. Roberts
Affiliation:
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Wallingford, OX10 8BB, UK
M. Bonell
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Paris
L. A. Bruijnzeel
Affiliation:
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
Get access

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Many of the agricultural land use systems replacing tropical forest can be regarded as only semi-permanent. In shifting agriculture cultivated fields are abandoned within two to three years while pastures in Amazonia may have a productive period of only six to twelve years (Sanchez and Hailu, 1996; Uhl et al., 1988). Abandoned fields are usually left for secondary succession with trees and shrubs establishing in these areas initiating the forest recovery. In some tropical regions secondary forests already form the most important land cover and are likely to become more important as long as forest conversion proceeds and sustainable management systems for the deforested areas are lacking. Fearnside (1996) estimated that 30% of the deforested area of the Brazilian Amazon was covered by secondary vegetation in 1990. Similarly, in mainland South East Asia, a region with a long history of shifting cultivation, secondary forest comprises about one third in representative areas in northern Thailand (Fox et al., 1995), northern Vietnam (Fox et al., 2000) and southern China (Xu et al., 1999).

The conversion from forest to agricultural land use causes manifold changes in water and nutrient cycles and has been studied for different site conditions and degrees of disturbance (Malmer et al., Grip et al., this volume). This chapter reviews the changes in vegetation structure, dynamics of nutrient pools in soil and phytomass, and subsequent alterations of the hydrological cycle during the process of forest recovery on abandoned pastures and in shifting cultivation systems.

Type
Chapter
Information
Forests, Water and People in the Humid Tropics
Past, Present and Future Hydrological Research for Integrated Land and Water Management
, pp. 598 - 621
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aboal, J. R., Jimenéz, M. S., Morales, D. and Hernández, M. (1999) Rainfall interception in laurel forest in the Canary Islands. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 97, 73–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aide, T. M., Zimmerman, J. K., Herrera, L., Rosario, M. and Serrano, M. (1995) Forest recovery in abandoned tropical pastures in Puerto Rico. Forest Ecology and Management 77, 77–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aide, T. M., Zimmermann, J. K., Rosario, M. and Marcano, H. (1996) Forest recovery in abandoned cattle pastures along an elevational gradient in northeast Puerto Rico. Biotropica 28, 537–548CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alexandre, D. Y. (1991) Comportement hydrique au cours de la saison sèche et place dans la succession de trois arbres guyanais: Trema micrantha, Goupia glabra et Eperua grandiflora. Annales des Sciences Forestieres 48, 101–112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andriesse, J. P and Schelhaas, R. M. (1987) A monitoring study of nutrient cycles in soils used for shifting cultivation under various climatic conditions in tropical Asia. II. Nutrient stores in biomass and soil – Results of baseline studies. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 19, 285–310CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aweto, A. O. (1981) Secondary succession and soil fertility restoration in south-western Nigeria. II. Soil fertility restoration. Journal of Ecology 69, 609–614CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baar, R. (1997) Vegetationskundliche und -ökologische Untersuchungen der Buschbrache der Feldumlagewirtschaft im östlichen Amazonasgebiet. Goltze, Göttingen. 202 pp
Barker, M. G., Press, M. C. and Brown, N. D. (1997) Photosynthetic characteristics of dipterocarp seedlings in three tropical rainforest light environments: a basis for niche partitioning?Oecologia 112, 453–463Google Scholar
Bartholomow, W. J., Meyer, J. and Laudelot, H. (1953) Mineral nutrient immobilization under forest and grass fallow in the Yamgambi (Belgian Congo) region. Pubs. Inst. Natn. Etude Agron. Congo Belge. Serie Scientifique 57, 1–27Google Scholar
Bastable, H. G., Shuttleworth, W. J., Dallarosa, R. G., Fisch, G. and Nobre, C. A. (1993). Observations of climate, albedo and surface radiation over cleared and undisturbed Amazonian Forest. International Journal of Climatology 13, 783–796CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berish, C. W. (1982) Root biomass and surface area in three successional tropical forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 12, 699–704CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berish, C. W. and Ewel, J. J. (1988) Root development in simple and complex tropical successional ecosystems. Plant and Soil 106, 73–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonell, M. (1993) Progress in the understanding of runoff generation dynamics in forests. Journal of Hydrology 150, 217–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, S. and Lugo, A. E. (1990a) Tropical secondary forests. Journal of Tropical Ecology 6, 1–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, S. and Lugo, A. E. (1990b) Effects of forest clearing and succession on the carbon and nitrogen content of soils in Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands. Plant and Soil 124, 53–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruijnzeel, L. A. (1991) Nutrient input-output budgets of tropical forest ecosystems. A review. Journal of Tropical Ecology 7, 1–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruijnzeel, L. A. (1996) Predicting the hydrological impacts of land cover transformation in the humid tropics: the need for integrated research. In: Amazonian deforestation and climate. Edited by J. H. C. Gash, C. A. Nobre, J. M. Roberts and R. L. Victoria. John Wiley, Chichester, UK. Pp. 15–55
Bruijnzeel, L. A. (2002). Hydrology of tropical montane cloud forests: a reassessment. In Hydrology and Water Management of the Humid Tropics, ed. J. S. Gladwell, pp. 353–383. UNESCO IHP Technical Document in Hydrology No 52. Paris: UNESCO
Bruijnzeel, L. A. and Proctor, J. (1995) Hydrology and biochemistry of tropical montane cloud forests: What do we really know? In: L. S. Hamilton, J. O. Juvik and F. N. Scatena (eds): Tropical Montane Cloud Forests, p. 38–78. Ecological Studies 110. Springer, Berlin
Buschbacher, R., Uhl, C. and Serrão, E. A. S. (1988) Abandoned pastures in eastern Amazonia. II. Nutrient stocks in the soil and vegetation. Journal of Ecology 76, 682–699CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calder, I. R. (1986) A stochastic model of rainfall interception. Journal of Hydrology 89, 65–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calder, I. R. (1998) Water use by forests, limits and controls. Tree Physiology 18, 625–631CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Calder, I. R., Wright, I. R. and Murdiyarso, D. (1986) A study of evaporation from tropical rainforest - West Java. Journal of Hydrology 89, 13–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cannell, M. G. R. (1982) World Forest Biomass and Primary Production Data. Academic Press, London. 391 pp
Carlson, R. E., Yarger, D. N. and Shaw, R. H. (1971) Factors affecting the spectral properties of leaves with special emphasis on leaf water status. Agronomy Journal 63, 186–189CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavelier, J., Jaramillo, M., Solis, D. and León, D. (1997) Water balance and nutrient inputs in bulk precipitation in tropical montane cloud forest in Panama. Journal of Hydrology 193, 83–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavelier, J. and Estevez, J. (1996) Fine root biomass in three successsional stages of an Andean cloud forest in Colombia. Biotropica 28, 728–736CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiarello, N. R., Field, C. B. and Mooney, H. A. (1987). Midday wilting in a tropical pioneer tree. Functional Ecology 1, 3–11CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, D. B., (1996).Abolishing virginity. Journal of Tropical Ecology 12, 735–739CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clausing, G. (1994) Frühe Regeneration und Wiederbesiedlung auf Kulturflächen der Wald-Feld-Wechselwirtschaft im östlichen Amazonasgebiet. Goltze, Göttingen. 151 pp
Clearwater, M. J., Susilawaty, R., Effendi, R. and Gardingen, P. R. (1999) Rapid photosynthetic acclimation of Shorea johorensis seedlings after logging disturbance in central Kalimantan. Oecologia 121, 478–488CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corlett, R. T. (1994).What is secondary forest?Journal of Tropical Ecology 10, 445–447CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornish, P. M. (1993).The effects of logging and forest regeneration on water yields in a moist eucalypt forest in New South Wales, Australia. Journal of Hydrology 150, 301–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culf, A. D., Fisch, G. and Hodnett, M. G. (1995) The albedo of Amazonian forest and ranchland. Journal of Climate 8, 1544–15542.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moraes, J. F. L., Volkoff, B., Cerri, C. C. and Bernoux, M. (1996) Soil properties under Amazon forest and changes due to pasture installation in Rondonia, Brazil. Geoderma 70, 63–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denich, M. (1989) Untersuchungen zur Bedeutung junger Sekundärvegetation für die Nutzungssystemproduktivität im östlichen Amazonasgebiet, Brasilien. Göttinger Beiträge zur Land- und Forstwirtschaft in den Tropen und Subtropen 46, Goltze, Göttingen. 265 pp
Dias-Filho, M. B. and Dawson, T. E. (1995) Physiological responses to soil moisture stress in two Amazonian gap-invader species. Functional Ecology 9, 213–221CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, T. E. (1998) Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants. Oecologia, 117: 476–485CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ewel, J. J. (1976) Litter fall and leaf decomposition in a tropical forest succession in eastern Guatemala. Journal of Ecology 64, 293–308CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewel, J. J. (1980) Tropical succession: manifold routes to maturity. Special Issue: Tropical succession. Biotropica 12, 2–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewel, J., Benedict, F., Berish, C. and Brown, S. (1982) Leaf area, light transmission, roots and leaf damage in nine tropical plant communities. Agro-Ecosystems 7, 305–326CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewel, J., Berish, C. and Brown, B. (1981) Slash and burn impacts on a Costa Rican wet forest site. Ecology 62, 816–829CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewel, J. J., Chai, P. and Tsai, L. M. (1983) Biomass and floristics of three young second-growth forests in Sarawak. The Malaysian Forester 46, 347–364Google Scholar
Fallas, J. (1996) Cuantificacion de la intercepcion en un bosque nuboso, Mte. De los Olivos, Cuenca del Rio Chiquito, Guanacaste, Costa Rica. CREED Technical Note 6, CREED Costa Rica, Tropical Science Center, San José, Costa Rica. 37 pp
Fearnside, P. M. (1996) Amazonian deforestation and global warming: Carbon stocks in vegetation replacing Brazil's Amazon forest. Forest Ecology and Management 80, 21–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fearnside, P. M. and Guimaraes, W. M. (1996) Carbon uptake by secondary forests in Brazilian Amazonia. Forest Ecology and Management 80, 35–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisch, G., Wright, I. R. and Bastable, H. G. (1994) Albedo of tropical grass: A case study of pre- and post-burning. International Journal of Climatology 14, 103–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fölster, H., las Salas, G. and Khanna, P. K. (1976) A tropical evergreen forest site with perched water table, Magdalena valley, Columbia: Biomass and bioelement inventory of primary and secondary vegetation. Oecologia Plantarum 11, 297–320Google Scholar
Fox, J., Krummel, J., Yarnasarn, S., Ekasingh, M. and Podger, N. (1995). Land use and landscape dynamics in northern Thailand: assessing change in three upland watersheds. Ambio 24, 328–334Google Scholar
Fox, J., Truong, D. M., Rambo, A. T., Tuyen, N. P., Cuc, L. T. and Leisz, S. (2000). Shifting cultivation: an old paradigm for managing tropical forests. Bio Science 50, 521–528Google Scholar
Frahm, J.-P. (1990) The ecology of epiphytic bryophytes on Mt. Kinabalu, Sabah (Malaysia). Nova Hedwigia 51, 121–132Google Scholar
Fritsch, J.-M. (1993) The hydrological effects of clearing tropical rainforest and of the implementation of alternative land uses. International Association of Hydrological Sciences Publication 216, 53–66Google Scholar
Fujisaka, S., Escobar, G. and Veneklaas, G. E. (1998) Plant community diversity relative to human land uses in an Amazon forest colony. Biodiversity and Conservation 7, 41–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gash, J. H. C. (1979) An analytical model of rainfall interception of forests. Quarterly Journal of Royal Meteorological Society 105, 43–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gentry, A. H. (1988) Changes in plant community diversity and floristic composition on environmental and geographical gradients. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 75, 1–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerke, H. H. and Genuchten, M. T. (1993) A dual-porosity model for simulating the preferential movement of water and solutes in structured porous media. Water Resources Research 29, 305–319CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giambelluca, T. W. (2002).The hydrology of altered tropical forest. Invited Commentary. Hydrological Processes 16, 1665–1669CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giambelluca, T. W. (1996) Tropical land cover change: Characterising the post-forest land surface. In: T. W. Giambelluca and A. Henderson-Sellers. Developing Southern Hemisphere Perspectives, p. 293–318. John Wiley, New York
Giambelluca, T. W., Fox, J., Yarnasarn, S., Onobutr, P. and Nullet, M. A. (1999) Dry-season radiation balance of land covers replacing forest in northern Thailand. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 95, 53–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giambelluca, T. W., Hölscher, D., Bastos, T. X., Frazão, R. R., Nullet, M. A. and Ziegler, A. D. (1997) Observations of albedo and radiation balance over post-forest land surfaces in Eastern Amazon Basin. Journal of Climate 10, 919–9282.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giambelluca, T. W., Nullet, M. A., Ziegler, A. D. and Tran, L. T. (2000). Latent and sensible heat energy flux over deforested land surfaces in the eastern Amazon and northern Thailand. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 21, 107–130CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godsey, S. and Elsenbeer, H. (2002).The soil hydrologic response to forest regrowth: a case study from southwestern Amazonia. Hydrological Processes 16, 1519–1522CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, G., Meinzer, F. C., Sternberg, L. D. S. L., Jackson, P., Cavalier, J. and Holbrook, N. M. (1996) Evaluating aspects of water economy and photosynthetic performance with stable isotopes from water and organic matter. In S. S. Mulkey, R. L. Chazdon and A. P. Smith (eds), Tropical Forest Plant Ecophysiology, Chapman and Hall, London. Pp. 244–267CrossRef
Grace, J., Lloyd, J., Miranda, A. C., Miranda, H. and Gash, J. H. C. (1998) Fluxes of carbon dioxide and water vapour over a C4 pasture in south-western Amazonia (Brazil). Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 25, 519–530CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guggenberger, G. and Zech, W. (1999) Soil organic matter composition under primary forest, pasture, and secondary forest succession, Region Huetar Norte, Costa Rica. Forest Ecology and Management 124, 93–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hafkenscheid, R. L. L. J. (2000) Hydrology and biogeochemistry of tropical montane rainforests of contrasting stature in the Blue Mountains, Jamaica. PhD Thesis, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
Hall, R. L., Allen, S. J., Rosier, P. T. W. and Hopkins, R. L. (1998) Transpiration from coppiced poplar and willow measured with sap-flow methods. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 90, 275–290CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, R. L., Calder, I. R., Gunawardena, E. R. N. and Rosier, P. T. W. (1996) Dependence of rainfall interception on drop size: 3. Implementation and comparative performance of the stochastic model using data from a tropical site in Sri Lanka. Journal of Hydrology 185, 389–407CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harcombe, P. A. (1977) The influence of fertilization on some aspects of succession in a humid tropical forest. Ecology 58, 1375–1383CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herrera, R., Jordan, C. F., Medina, E. and Klinge, H. (1981) How human activities disturb the nutrient cycles of a tropical rainforest in Amazonia. Ambio, 10, 109–114Google Scholar
Hertel, D., Leuschner, C. and Hölscher, D. (2003) Size and structure of fine root systems in old-growth and secondary tropical montane forests (Costa Rica). Biotropica 35, 143–153Google Scholar
Herwitz, S. R. (1985) Interception storage capacities of tropical rainforest canopy trees. Journal of Hydrology 77, 237–252CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herwitz, S. R. (1986) Infiltration-excess caused by stemflow in a cyclone-prone tropical rainforest. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 11, 401–412CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodnett, M. G., Pimental da Silva, L., da Rocha, H. R. and Senna, R. C. (1995) Seasonal soil water storage changes beneath central Amazonian rainforest and pasture. Journal of Hydrology 170, 233–254CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodnett, M. G., Oyama, M. D., Tomasella, J. and Marques Filho, A. de O. (1996) Comparisons of long-term water storage behaviour under pasture and forest in three areas of Amazonia. In: J. H. C. Gash, C. A. Nobre, J. M. Roberts and R. L. Victoria (eds), Amazonian Deforestation and Climate. John Wiley, New York
Hölscher, D. (1995) Wasser- und Stoffhaushalt eines Agrarökosystems mit Waldbrache im östlichen Amazonasgebiet. Göttinger Beiträge zur Land- und Forstwirtschaft in den Tropen und Subtropen, Goltze, Göttingen. 134 pp
Hölscher, D., Köhler, L., Leuschner, C. and Kappelle, M. (2003) Nutrient fluxes in stemflow and throughfall in three successional stages of an upper montane rain forest in Costa Rica. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19, 557–565CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hölscher, D., Ludwig, B., Möller, R. F. and Fölster, H. (1997a) Dynamic of soil chemical parameters in shifting agriculture in the Eastern Amazon. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 66, 153–163CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hölscher, D., Möller, R. F., Denich, M. and Fölster, H. (1997b) Nutrient input-output budget of shifting agriculture in Eastern Amazonia. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 47, 49–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hölscher, D., , T. D. de A., Bastos, T. X., Denich, M. and Fölster, H. (1997c) Evaporation from young secondary vegetation in Eastern Amazonia. Journal of Hydrology 193, 293–305CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hölscher, D., , T. D. de A., Möller, R. F., Denich, M. and Fölster, H. (1998) Rainfall partitioning and related hydrochemical fluxes in a diverse and a mono specific (Phenakospermum guyannense) secondary vegetation stand in eastern Amazonia. Oecologia 114, 251–257CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holl, K. D. (1999) Factors limiting tropical rainforest regeneration in abandoned pasture: Seed rain, seed germination microclimate and soil. Biotropica 3, 229–242CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hornbeck, J. W., Martin, C. W. and Eagar, C. (1997) Summary of water yield experiments at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 27, 2043–2052Google Scholar
Huc, R., Ferhi, A. and Guehl, J. M. (1994) Pioneer and late stage tropical rainforest species (French Guiana) growing under common conditions differ in leaf gas exchange regulation, carbon isotope discrimination and leaf water potential. Oecologia 99, 297–305CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, R. F., Kauffman, J. B. and Jaramillo, V. J. (1999) Biomass, carbon, and nutrient dynamics of secondary forests in a humid tropical region of México. Ecology 80, 1892–1907Google Scholar
Hutjes, R. W. A., Wierda, A. and Veen, A. W. L. (1990) Rainfall interception in the Tai Forest, Ivory-Coast – Application of 2 simulation-models to a humid tropical system. Journal of Hydrology 114, 259–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, P., Cavalier, J., Goldstein, G. and Meinzer, F. C. (1995) Partitioning of water resources among plants of a lowland tropical forest. Oecologia, 101, 197–203CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jetten, V. G. (1994) Modelling the effects of logging on the water balance of a tropical rainforest. A study in Guyana. Tropenbos series 6, Wageningen
Jetten, V. G. (1996) Interception of tropical rainforest: Performance of a canopy water balance model. Hydrological Processes 10, 671–6853.0.CO;2-A>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jipp, P. H., Nepstad, D. C., Cassel, D. K. and Carvalho, C. R. (1998) Deep soil moisture storage and transpiration in forests and pastures of seasonally dry Amazonia. Climatic Change 39, 395–412CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, C. F. and Uhl, C. (1978) Biomass of a ‘tierra firme’ forest of the Amazon Basin. Oecologia Plantarum 13, 387–400Google Scholar
Jordan, C. F. and Heuveldop, J. (1981) The water budget of an Amazonian rainforest. Acta Amazonica 11, 87–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, C. F., Caskey, W., Escalante, G., Herrera, R., Montagnini, F., Todd, R. and Uhl, C. (1983) Nitrogen dynamics during conversion of primary Amazonian rainforest to slash and burn agriculture. Oikos 40, 131–139CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juo, A. S. R., Franzluebbers, K., Dabiri, A. and Ikhile, B. (1995) Changes in soil properties during long-term fallow and continuous cultivation after forest clearing in Nigeria. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 56, 9–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juo, A. S. R. and Lal, R. (1977) The effect of fallow and continuous cultivation on the chemical and physical properties of an Alfisol in western Nigeria. Plant and Soil 47, 567–584CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juvik, J. O., and Nullet, D. (1995) A proposed standard fog collector for use in high-elevation regions - comment. Journal of Applied Meteorology 34, 2108–21102.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kappelle, M., Geuze, T., Leal, M. E. and Cleef, A. M. (1996) Successional age and forest structure in a Costa Rican upper montane Quercus forest. Journal of Tropical Ecology 12, 681–689CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kappelle, M. and Leal, M. E. (1996) Changes in leaf morphology and foliar nutrient status along a successional gradient in a Costa Rican upper montane Quercus forest. Biotropica 28, 331–344CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelliher, F. M., Leuning, R. and Schulze, E.-D. (1993) Evaporation and canopy characteristics of coniferous forests and grasslands. Oecologia 95, 153–163CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Khanna, P. K., Raison, R. J., and Falkiner, R. A. (1994) Chemical properties of ash derived from Eucalyptus litter and its effects on forest soils. Forest Ecology and Management 66, 107–125CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klaassen, W. (1992).Average fluxes from heterognous vegetated regions. Boundary-Layer Meteorology 58, 329–354CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klinge, R. (1998) Wasser- und Nährstoffdynamik im Boden und Bestand beim Aufbau einer Holzplantage im östlichen Amazonasgebiet. Göttinger Beiträge zur Land- und Forstwirtschaft in den Tropen und Subtropen, Goltze, Göttingen. 260 pp
Kochenderfer, J. N. and Wendel, G. W. (1983) Plant succession and hydrologic recovery on a deforested and herbicided watershed. Forest Science 29, 545–558Google Scholar
Kochenderfer, J. N., Edwards, P. J. and Helvey, J. D., 1990. Land management and water yield in the Appalachians. In: Watershed Planning and Analysis in Action, Symposium Proceedings, Durango, Colorado, American Society of Civil Engineers, New York. Pp. 523–532
Kuraiji, K. and Paul, L. L. (1994) Effects of rainfall interception on water balance in two tropical rainforest catchments, Sabah, Malaysia. In: Proceedings of the International Symposium on Forest Hydrology, Tokyo, Japan, 291–298
Lal, R. and Cummings, J. D. (1979) Changes in properties of an Alfisol produced by various crop covers. Soil Science 127, 377–382CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Langenheim, J. H., Osmond, C. B., Brooks, A. and Ferrar, P. J. (1984) Photosyntheticc responses to light in seedlings of selected Amazonian and Australian rainforest tree species. Oecologia 63, 215–224CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leuschner, Ch. (1998) Water extraction by tree fine roots in the forest floor of a temperate Fagus-Quercus forest. Annales Sciences Forestières 55, 141–157CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindroth, A. and Iritz, Z. (1993) Surface energy budget dynamics of short rotation willow forest. Theoretical and Applied Climatology 47, 175–185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, C. R., Gash, J. H. C., Shuttleworth, W. J. and Marques Filho, A. de O. (1988) The measurement and modelling of rainfall interception by Amazonian rainforest. -Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 43, 277–294CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, C. R. and Marques Filho, A. de O. (1988) Spatial variability of throughfall and stemflow measurements in Amazonian rainforest. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 42, 63–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackensen, J., Hölscher, D., Klinge, R. and Fölster, H. (1996) Nutrient transfer to the atmosphere due to burning of debris in East-Amazonia. Forest Ecology and Management 86, 121–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackensen, J., Tillery-Stevens, M., Klinge, R. and Fölster, H. (2000) Site parameters, species composition, phytomass structure and element stores of a Terra-firme forest in East-Amazonia, Brazil. Plant Ecology 151(2), 101–119CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malmer, A. (1992) Water-yield changes after clear-felling tropical rainforest and establishment of forest plantation in Sabah, Malaysia. Journal of Hydrology 134, 77–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martins, S. P., Cerri, C. C., Volkoff, B., Andreaux, F. and Chauvel, A. (1991) Consequences of clearing and tillage on the soil of a natural Amazonian ecosystem. Forest Ecology and Management 38, 273–281CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matson, P. (1990) Plant-soil interactions in primary succession at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Oecologia 85, 241–246CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McNaughton, K. G. and Jarvis, P. G. (1983) Predicting effects of vegetation changes on transpiration and evaporation. In: T. T. Kozlowski (ed.) Water Deficits and Plant Growth. Vol. 7, Academic Press, New York
McWilliam, A.-L. C., Roberts, J. M., Cabral, O. M. R., Leitao, M. V. B. R., Costa, A. C. L., Maitelli, G. T. and Zamparoni, C. A. G. P. (1993) Leaf area index and aboveground biomass of terra firme rainforest and adjacent clearings in Amazonia. Functional Ecology 7, 310–317CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monteith, J. L. (1965) Evaporation and environment. In: The state and movement of water in living organisms, 19th Symposium of the Society for Experimental Biology, (Edited by G. E. Fogg), Cambridge University Press, London. Pp. 215–234
Monteith, J. L. and Unsworth, M. H., 1990. Principles of Environmental Physics, Edward Arnold, London. 291 pp
Mooney, H. A., Ehleringer, J. and Bjorkman, O. (1977) The energy balance of the leaves of the evergreen shrub Atriplex hymenelytra. Oecologia 29, 301–310CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nadkarni, N. M. (1984) Epiphyte biomass and nutrient capital of a neotropic elfin forest. Biotropica 16, 249–256CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadkarni, N. M. (2000) Colonization of stripped branch surfaces by epiphytes in a lower montane cloud forest, Monteverde, Costa Rica. Biotropica 16, 249–256CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nepstad, D. C. (1989) Forest regrowth in abandoned pastures of eastern Amazonia: Limitations to tree seedling survival and growth. PhD Thesis, Yale University. 226 pp
Nepstad, D. C., Carvalho, C. R., Davidson, E. A., Jipp, P. H., Lefebvre, P. A., Negreiros, G. H., da Silva, E. D., Stone, T. A., Trumbore, S. E. and Vieira, S. (1994) The role of deep roots in the hydrological and carbon cycles of Amazonian forests and pastures. Nature, 372, 666–669CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nepstad, D. C., Uhl, C., and Serrão, E. A. S. (1991) Recuperation of a degraded Amazonian landscape: forest recovery and agricultural restoration. Ambio 20, 248–255Google Scholar
Oguntoyinbo, J. S. (1970) Reflection coefficient of natural vegetation, crops and urban surfaces in Nigeria. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 95, 430–441CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palm, C. A. and Szott, L. T. (1984) Unpublished draft on soil and vegetation dynamics during fallows. Proyecto Suelos Tropicales, INIPA-NCSU, Yurimaguas, Peru
Paul, L. L. and Kuraiji, K. (1993) Transition Report of Hydrological Study on Forested Catchments in Sabah, 1990–1992. Research and Development Division, Sabah Forestry Department, Sandakan, Sabah, Malaysia
Pinker, R. T. (1982) The diurnal asymmetry in the albedo of tropical forest vegetation. Forest Science 28, 297–304Google Scholar
Pinker, R. T., Thompson, O. E. and Eck, T. F. (1980) The albedo of a tropical evergreen forest. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 106, 551–558CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pócs, T. (1980) The epiphytic biomass and its effect on the waterbalance of two rainforest types in the Uluguru Mountains (Tanzania, East Africa). Acta Botanica Hungarica 26, 143–167Google Scholar
Popenoe, H. (1957) The influence of the shifting cultivation cycle on soil pro-perties in Central America. Proc. 9th Pacific Science Congress, p. 72–77
Poorter, L. and Oberbauer, S. F. (1993) Photosynthetic induction responses of two rainforest tree species in relation to light environment. Oecologia 96, 193–199CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Priess, J., Then, C. and Fölster, H. (1999) Litter and fine-root production in three types of tropical premontane rainforest in Venezuela. Plant Ecology 143, 171–187CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raich, J. W. (1983) Throughfall and stemflow in mature and year-old wet tropical forest. Tropical Ecology 24, 234–243Google Scholar
Rao, K. S. and Ramakrishnan, P. S. (1989) Role of bamboos in nutrient conservation during secondary succession following slash and burn agriculture (jhum) in north-east India. Journal of Applied Ecology 26, 625–633CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, J. M., Cabral, O. M., Aguiar, L. F. (1990) Stomatal and boundary-layer conductances measured in a terra firme rainforest, Manaus, Brasil. Journal of Applied Ecology 27, 336–353CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, J., Cabral, O. M. R., Fisch, G., Molion, L. C. B., Moore, C. J., Shuttleworth, W. J. (1993) Transpiration from an Amazonian rainforest calculated from stomatal conductance measurements. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 65, 175–196CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, J., Cabral, O. M. R., McWilliam, A-L. C., Da Costa, J. De P., Sá, T. D. De A. (1996) An overview of the leaf area index and physiological measurements during ABRACOS. In: Amazonian Deforestation and Climate. J. H. C. Gash, C. A. Nobre, J. M. Roberts and R. L. Victoria (eds) John Wiley, Chichester. pp. 287–306
Rutter, A. J., Kershaw, K. A., Robins, P. C. and Morton, A. J. (1971) A predictive model of rainfall interception in forests: I. Derivation of the model from observations in a plantation of Corsican pine. Agricultural Meteorology 9, 367–384CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sá, T. D. De A., Costa, J De P. Da, and Roberts, J. M. (1996) Forest and pasture conductances in southern Pará, Amazonia. In: Amazonian Deforestation and Climate. Edited by J. H. C. Gash, C. A. Nobre, J. M. Roberts and R. L. Victoria. John Wiley, Chichester, UK. pp. 241–264
Saldarriaga, J., West, D. C., Tharp, M. and Uhl, C. (1988) Long-term chronosequence of forest succession in the upper Río Negro of Colombia and Venezuela. Journal of Ecology 76, 938–958CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldarriaga, J. G. and Uhl, C. (1982) Recovery of forest vegetation following slash-and-burn agriculture in the upper Rio Negro. In: A. Gomez-Pompa, T. C. Whitmore and M. Hadley (eds). Rain Forest Regeneration and Management, UNESCO, Paris. Pp. 303–313
Sanchez, P. A. (1976) Properties and management of soils in the tropics. New York, Wiley. 618 pp
Sanchez, P. A. and Hailu, M. (1996) (eds) Alternatives to slash-and-burn agriculture. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, Special Issue
Sanford, R. L. (1985) Root ecology of mature and successional Amazon forests. Dissertation, University of Berkeley, California
Schellekens, J., Scatena, F. N., Bruijnzeel, L. A. and Wickel, A. J. (1999) Modelling rainfall interception by a lowland tropical rainforest in northeastern Puerto Rico. Journal of Hydrology 225, 168–184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, G. (1977) The importance of old-field succession biomass increments to shifting cultivation. Great Plains-Rocky Mountain Geographical Journal 6, 318–327Google Scholar
Scott, G. (1987) Shifting Cultivation where land is limited – Case study No. 3: Campa Indian agriculture in the Gran Pajonal of Peru. In: Jordan, C. F. (ed.) Amazonian Rain Forests – Ecosystems Disturbance and Recovery. Springer, Berlin, pp. 34–45
Senock, R. and Leuschner, Ch. (1999) Water flux dynamics in small diameter roots of a fast growing tropical tree. Plant and Soil 208, 57–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shuttleworth, W. J. (1989) Micrometeorology of temperate and tropical forest. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, B324, 299–334CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snedaker, S. C. (1980) Successional immobilization of nutrients and biologally mediated recycling in tropical forests. Biotropica 12 (Suppl.), 16–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sommer, R., Denich, M., Kanashiro, M. and Vlek, P. L. G. (2000) Carbon storage and root penetration in deep soils under small-farmer land-use systems in the Eastern Amazon region, Brazil. Plant and Soil 219, 231–241CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sommer, R., Carvalho, E. J. M., Vlek, P. L. G. and Fölster, H. (1998) Soil water extraction through a secondary vegetation during the dry season in 1997 in eastern Amazonia. Proceedings of the Third SHIFT-Workshop Manaus, March 15–19, 1998, BMBF, Bonn
Sommer, R., Abreu Sá, T. D., Vielhauer, K., Carioca de Araújo, A., Fölster, H. and Vlek, P. L. G. (2002). Transpiration and canopy conductance of secondary vegetation in the eastern Amazon. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 112, 103–121CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stark, N. (1971) Nutrient cycling II: Nutrient distribution in Amazonian vegetation. Journal of Tropical Ecology 12, 177–201Google Scholar
Steinhardt, U. (1978) Untersuchungen über den Wasser- und Nährstoffhaushalt eines andine Wolkenwaldes in Venezuela. Göttinger Bodenkundliche Berichte 56. 185 pp
Street, I. M. (1980) Changes in the carbon inventories in live biomass and detritus as a result of the practice of shifting agriculture and the conversion of forest to pasture: Case studies in Peru, New Guinea and Hawaii. International Seminar on Geography and the Third World, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Stromgaard, P. (1984) The immediate effect of burning and ash-fertilization. Plant and Soil 80, 307–320CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swamy, P. S. and Ramakrishnan, P. S. (1987) Contribution of Mikania micrantha during secondary succession following slash-and-burn agriculture (Jhum) in North-East India II: Nutient cycling. Forest Ecology and Management 22, 239–249CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szott, L. T. and Palm, C. A. (1996) Nutrient stocks in managed and natural humid tropical fallows. Plant and Soil 186, 293–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szott, L. T., Palm, C. A. and Davey, C. B. (1994) Biomass and litter accumulation under managed and natural tropical fallows. Forest Ecology and Management 67, 177–190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanner, E. V. J. (1977) Four montane rainforests of Jamaica: a quantitative characterization of the floristics, the soils, and the foliar mineral levels, and a discussions of the interrelations. Journal of Ecology 65, 883–918CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teklehaimanot, Z., Jarvis, P. G. and Ledger, D. C., (1991) Rainfall interception and boundary layer conductance in relation to tree spacing. Journal of Hydrology 123, 261–278CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tobón Marin, C. (1999) Monitoring and modelling hydrological fluxes in support of nutrient cycling studies in Amazonian rainforest ecosystems. Tropenbos Series No 17, Wageningen. 162 pp
Trimble, G. R., Reinhart, K. G. and Webster, H. H. (1963) Cutting the forest to increase water yields. Journal of Forestry 61, 635–640Google Scholar
Ubarana, V. N. (1996) Observations and modelling of rainfall interception at two experimental sites in Amazonia. In: Amazonian Deforestation and Climate. J. H. C. Gash, C. A. Nobre, J. M. Roberts and R. L. Victoria (eds) John Wiley, Chichester. Pp. 151–162
Uhl, C. (1982) Tree dynamics in species rich tierra firme forest in Amazonia, Venezuela. Acta Cientifica Venezolana 33, 72–77Google Scholar
Uhl, C. (1987) Factors controlling succession following slash-and-burn agriculture in Amazonia. Journal of Ecology 75, 377–407CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uhl, C., Clark, K., Clark, H. and Murphy, P. (1981) Early plant succession after cutting and burning in the upper Rio Negro region of the Amazon Basin. Journal of Ecology 69, 631–649CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uhl, C., Buschbacher, R. and Serrão, E. A. S. (1988) Abandoned pastures in eastern Amazonia. I. Patterns of plant succession. Journal of Ecology 75, 663–681CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uhl, C., and Jordan, C. F. (1984) Succession and nutrient dynamics following forest cutting and burning in Amazonia. Ecology 65, 1476–1490CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plas, M. C. and Bruijnzeel, L. A. (1993) The impact of mechanized selective logging of lowland rainforest on topsoil infiltrability in the upper Segan area, Sabah, Malaysia. International Association of Hydrological Sciences Publication 216, 203–211Google Scholar
Veen, A. W. L., Hutjes, R. W. A., Klaassen, W., Kruijt, B. and Lankreijer, H. J. M. (1991). Evaporative conditions across a grass-forest boundary: a comment on the strategy for regionalizing evaporation. International Association of Hydrological Sciences Publication 204, 43–52Google Scholar
Veneklaas, E. and Ek, R. (1990) Rainfall interception in two tropical montane rainforests, Colombia. Hydrological Processes 4, 311–326CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vitousek, P. M. and Reiners, W. A. (1975) Ecosystem succession and nutrient retention: a hypothesis. Bioscience 25, 376–381CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wadsworth, G., Reisenauer, H. M., Gordon, D. R. and Singer, M. J. (1990) Effects of length of forest fallow on fertility dynamics in a Mexican ultisol. Plant and Soil 122, 151–156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waterloo, M. J. (1994) Water and nutrient dynamics of Pinus carribea plantation forests on former grassland soils in southwest Viti Levu, Fiji. PhD Thesis, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
Watson, F. G. R., Vertessy, R. A., and Grayson, R. B. (1999) Large-scale modelling of forest hydrological processes and their long-term effect on water yield. Hydrological Processes 13, 689–7003.0.CO;2-D>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weaver, P. L., Birdsey, R. A. and Lugo, A. E. (1987) Soil organic matter in secondary forests of Puerto Rico. Biotropica 19, 17–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Werner, P. (1984) Changes in soil properties during tropical wet forest succession in Costa Rica. Biotropica 16(1), 43–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wiesenmüller, J. (1999) Einfluß landwirtschaftlicher Flächenvorbereitung auf die Dynamik des Wurzelsystems und die oberirdische Regenerartion der Sekundärvegetation Ostamazoniens, Pará, Brasilien. Dissertation, University of Göttingen
Williams-Linera, G. (1983) Biomass and nutrient content in two successional stages of tropical wet forest in Uxpanapa, Mexico. Biotropica 15, 275–284CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, I. R., Gash, J. H. C., da Rocha, H. R., Shuttleworth, W. J., Nobre, C. A., Maitelli, G. T., Zamparoni, C. A. G. P. and Carvalho, P. R. A. (1992) Dry season micrometeorology of central Amazonian ranchland. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 118, 1083–1099CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xu, J., Fox, J., Xing, L., Podger, N., Leisz, S. and Xihui, A. (1999) Effects of swidden cultivation, population growth, and state policies on land cover in Yunnan, China. Mountain Research and Development 19, 123–132Google Scholar
Zinke, P. J., Sabhasri, S. and Kunstadter, P. (1978) Soil fertility aspects of the Lua forest fallow system of shifting cultivation. In: P. Kunstadter, E. C. Chapman and S. Sabhasri (eds). Farmers in the Forest: Economic Development and Marginal Agriculture in northern Thailand. East-West Population Institute University Press of Hawaii, Honolulu. p. 134–159

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×