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The várzea forests in Amazonia: flooding and the highly dynamic geomorphology interact with natural forest succession

MPG-Autoren
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Wittmann,  Florian
Working Group Tropical Ecology, Max Planck Institute for Limnology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Junk,  Wolfgang J.
Working Group Tropical Ecology, Max Planck Institute for Limnology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Piedade,  Maria T. F.
Working Group Tropical Ecology, Max Planck Institute for Limnology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Zitation

Wittmann, F., Junk, W. J., & Piedade, M. T. F. (2004). The várzea forests in Amazonia: flooding and the highly dynamic geomorphology interact with natural forest succession. Forest Ecology and Management, 196(2-3), 199-212. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2004.02.060.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000F-DAB1-F
Zusammenfassung
Although flooding and the highly dynamic geomorphology influence ecophysiology of trees in Amazonian white-water forests (várzea), information about the extent of these environmental conditions on distribution and richness of tree species is scarce. To better understand dynamic of natural forest succession and the development of different várzea forest types, we inventoried structure and floristic composition of trees ≥10 cm DBH in a total area of 5.24 ha in várzea forests near Tefé and near Manaus, Brazilian Amazon. The forests were of different successional stages and situated on different sites along the flood-level gradient. Topography and average inundation of all inventoried trees was measured with a theodolite. Sedimentation was recorded during the aquatic phase 2000 and the soil texture in each site determined. The low-várzea forests were composed of different successional stages subjected to annual floods between 7 and 3 m. Stand density per hectare averaged 490 individuals in the early successional stage, up to 1000 individuals in the early secondary stage and 434 individuals in the late successional stage, species richness amounted to 4, 45 and 91 tree species, respectively. The high-várzea forests were late successional stages subjected to annual inundations above 3 m. Stand density per hectare averaged 407 individuals and species richness amounted to 68 species in a frequently exploited forest near Manaus and to 172 species in a undisturbed forest near Tefé. Species richness and distribution along the gradients of flooding and sedimentation was well defined. Only 2.6% of 222 recorded tree species occurred over the whole flood-level gradient. Sedimentation was highest in the early successional stages near the slip-off slopes of the main-river channels, and decreased with increasing topographic level of the forested sites and proceeding succession, reaching lowest rates in the high-várzea forests. Simultaneously, soil texture changed from coarse-grained soils in early stages to fine-grained soils in subsequent stages. Thus, natural succession in várzea forests is linked to the biogenical induced silting up of the sites, because dunes and large stems building trees slow down water energy and favour the deposition of fine grained sediment. A special vegetation unit within the low várzea is the ‘chavascal’, a species-poor swamp forest, which establishes in the marginal zone of lakes or in ancient silted up river arms. Since it is located off the direct influence of the main-river channels, it seems to be characterised by longstanding stable environmental conditions, and therefore cannot rank with the successional sequence near the highly dynamic river systems