Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I General perspectives
- Part II Regional floristic and animal diversity
- Part III Hydrometeorology of tropical montane cloud forest
- Part IV Nutrient dynamics in tropical montane cloud forests
- Part V Cloud forest water use, photosynthesis, and effects of forest conversion
- Part VI Effects of climate variability and climate change
- Part VII Cloud forest conservation, restoration, and management issues
- 62 Environmental history and forest regeneration dynamics in a degraded valley of north-west Argentina's cloud forests
- 63 Impact of deforestation and forest regrowth on vascular epiphyte diversity in the Andes of Bolivia
- 64 Ecology and use of old-growth and recovering montane oak forests in the Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa Rica
- 65 Forest restoration in the tropical montane cloud forest belt of central Veracruz, Mexico
- 66 Ecological and social bases for the restoration of a High Andean cloud forest: preliminary results and lessons from a case study in northern Ecuador
- 67 Biodiversity-based livelihoods in the ceja andina forest zone of northern Ecuador: multi-stakeholder learning processes for the sustainable use of cloud forest areas
- 68 Embracing epiphytes in sustainable forest management: a pilot study from the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico
- 69 Fire dynamics and community management of fire in montane cloud forests in south-eastern Mexico
- 70 Assessment needs to support the development of arrangements for Payments for Ecosystem Services from tropical montane cloud forests
- 71 Conservation strategies for montane cloud forests in Costa Rica: the case of protected areas, payments for environmental services, and ecotourism
- References
63 - Impact of deforestation and forest regrowth on vascular epiphyte diversity in the Andes of Bolivia
from Part VII - Cloud forest conservation, restoration, and management issues
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I General perspectives
- Part II Regional floristic and animal diversity
- Part III Hydrometeorology of tropical montane cloud forest
- Part IV Nutrient dynamics in tropical montane cloud forests
- Part V Cloud forest water use, photosynthesis, and effects of forest conversion
- Part VI Effects of climate variability and climate change
- Part VII Cloud forest conservation, restoration, and management issues
- 62 Environmental history and forest regeneration dynamics in a degraded valley of north-west Argentina's cloud forests
- 63 Impact of deforestation and forest regrowth on vascular epiphyte diversity in the Andes of Bolivia
- 64 Ecology and use of old-growth and recovering montane oak forests in the Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa Rica
- 65 Forest restoration in the tropical montane cloud forest belt of central Veracruz, Mexico
- 66 Ecological and social bases for the restoration of a High Andean cloud forest: preliminary results and lessons from a case study in northern Ecuador
- 67 Biodiversity-based livelihoods in the ceja andina forest zone of northern Ecuador: multi-stakeholder learning processes for the sustainable use of cloud forest areas
- 68 Embracing epiphytes in sustainable forest management: a pilot study from the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico
- 69 Fire dynamics and community management of fire in montane cloud forests in south-eastern Mexico
- 70 Assessment needs to support the development of arrangements for Payments for Ecosystem Services from tropical montane cloud forests
- 71 Conservation strategies for montane cloud forests in Costa Rica: the case of protected areas, payments for environmental services, and ecotourism
- References
Summary
ABSTRACT
Species richness of vascular epiphytes in mature sub-montane and montane forests is compared that in adjacent 15-year old fallow forests at two sites in the Andes of Bolivia. These forests rank among the richest worldwide in terms of epiphyte diversity. Approximately 500 species (25 families, 110 genera) were recorded in total, whereas 0.33 ha of moist montane forest had up to 175 species. Fallows had 60–70% fewer epiphyte species than did mature forest, but species reductions varied considerably among different groups of epiphytes. Species richness of orchids, bromeliads, and grammitid and filmy ferns was much lower in fallows than in mature forest but was not reduced for hemi-epiphytic aroids, nor for polypodioid and asplenioid ferns. The reduced epiphyte diversity in fallows is explained by structural characteristics of the fallow trees, including the lack of dense epiphytic moss mats, and by the drier micro-climate in the fallows.
INTRODUCTION
Vascular epiphytes, including orchids, aroids, bromeliads, and ferns, are important components of moist tropical montane forests, both in terms of species richness (Gentry and Dodson, 1987; Benzing, 1990; Nieder et al., 1999; Krömer et al., 2005; Liede-Schumann and Breckle, 2008; Catchpole and Kirkpatrick, this volume), and their role in rainfall and cloud water interception and release (Hölscher et al., 2004; Köhler et al., 2007; Köhler et al., this volume; Tobón et al., this volume #26) and nutrient cycling (Nadkarni, 1984; Coxson and Nadkarni, 1995; cf. Chang et al., this volume; Oesker et al., this volume).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tropical Montane Cloud ForestsScience for Conservation and Management, pp. 605 - 609Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011