2023
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14531
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Effects of large mammal exclusion on seedling communities depend on plant species traits and landscape protection in human‐modified Costa Rican forests

Nohemi Huanca‐Nuñez,
Robin L. Chazdon,
Sabrina E. Russo

Abstract: Large terrestrial herbivorous mammals (LTH‐mammals) influence plant community structure by affecting seedling establishment in mature tropical forests. Many of these LTH‐mammals frequent secondary forests, but their effects on seedling establishment in them are understudied, hindering our understanding of how LTH‐mammals influence forest regeneration in human‐modified landscapes. We tested the hypothesis that the strength of LTH‐mammals' effects on seedling establishment depends on landscape protection, fores… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Here, recruitment rates might be less informative than in other forests because only a few plots that were 12 years or older had information on trees ≥1 cm dbh and met our criterion for the calculation of recruitment rates (Appendix S1: Table S1). Additionally, recruitment in the plots at the La Selva Biological Station (referred to in Appendix S1: Table S1 as Sarapiquí) is known to be affected by collared peccaries (Huanca‐Nuñez et al, 2023; Kuprewicz, 2013). Given their high abundance during the first ~15 years of succession, many of the high‐mortality species might actually have similarly high recruitment rates in ESF as many of the high‐mortality species in Panama, where data availability was more consistent throughout the chronosequence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here, recruitment rates might be less informative than in other forests because only a few plots that were 12 years or older had information on trees ≥1 cm dbh and met our criterion for the calculation of recruitment rates (Appendix S1: Table S1). Additionally, recruitment in the plots at the La Selva Biological Station (referred to in Appendix S1: Table S1 as Sarapiquí) is known to be affected by collared peccaries (Huanca‐Nuñez et al, 2023; Kuprewicz, 2013). Given their high abundance during the first ~15 years of succession, many of the high‐mortality species might actually have similarly high recruitment rates in ESF as many of the high‐mortality species in Panama, where data availability was more consistent throughout the chronosequence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%