Habitats suitable for the establishment of Shorea curtisii seedlings in a hill forest in Peninsular Malaysia

Trees of the family Dipterocarpaceae dominate the emergent canopy of most lowland rain forests in Asia (Ashton et al. 1988). The family is, therefore, one of the most ecologically important in South-East Asia. Shorea curtisii Dyer ex King is the most common tree species in the hill dipterocarp fores...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of tropical ecology 2010-09, Vol.26 (5), p.551-554
Hauptverfasser: Yagihashi, Tsutomu, Otani, Tatsuya, Tani, Naoki, Nakaya, Tomoki, Abd Rahman, Kassim, Matsui, Tetsuya, Tanouchi, Hiroyuki
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container_end_page 554
container_issue 5
container_start_page 551
container_title Journal of tropical ecology
container_volume 26
creator Yagihashi, Tsutomu
Otani, Tatsuya
Tani, Naoki
Nakaya, Tomoki
Abd Rahman, Kassim
Matsui, Tetsuya
Tanouchi, Hiroyuki
description Trees of the family Dipterocarpaceae dominate the emergent canopy of most lowland rain forests in Asia (Ashton et al. 1988). The family is, therefore, one of the most ecologically important in South-East Asia. Shorea curtisii Dyer ex King is the most common tree species in the hill dipterocarp forests of Peninsular Malaysia (Burgess 1975, Symington 2004), and is considered a key species for the dynamics of such forests. Currently, most Malaysian hill forests are selectively logged. Trees over 50 cm dbh are harvested, and any subsequent harvests depend on the remaining smaller trees. Such selective logging takes no account of seedling regeneration. Hence, subsequent timber harvests rely on trees derived from the seedlings that are already present and future seeds produced by the residual trees (Appanah & Mohd. Rasol 1994). Existing seedlings of S. curtisii in the forest, therefore, play a significant role in the dynamics of the hill forest. However, the conditions that constitute a suitable habitat for S. curtisii seedling establishment and survival remain unknown.
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Trop. Ecol</addtitle><description>Trees of the family Dipterocarpaceae dominate the emergent canopy of most lowland rain forests in Asia (Ashton et al. 1988). The family is, therefore, one of the most ecologically important in South-East Asia. Shorea curtisii Dyer ex King is the most common tree species in the hill dipterocarp forests of Peninsular Malaysia (Burgess 1975, Symington 2004), and is considered a key species for the dynamics of such forests. Currently, most Malaysian hill forests are selectively logged. Trees over 50 cm dbh are harvested, and any subsequent harvests depend on the remaining smaller trees. Such selective logging takes no account of seedling regeneration. Hence, subsequent timber harvests rely on trees derived from the seedlings that are already present and future seeds produced by the residual trees (Appanah &amp; Mohd. Rasol 1994). Existing seedlings of S. curtisii in the forest, therefore, play a significant role in the dynamics of the hill forest. 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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Bayesian methods
Biological and medical sciences
Canopies
dipterocarp
Dipterocarpaceae
dispersal limitation
Ecology
Forest ecology
Forest habitats
Forest regeneration
Forest reserves
Forestry
Forestry research
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Habitats
Logging
Plant species
Rainforests
Seed trees
Seedlings
selective logging
SHORT COMMUNICATIONS
Synecology
Terrestrial ecosystems
Timber industry
Trees
tropical rain forest
Tropical rain forests
title Habitats suitable for the establishment of Shorea curtisii seedlings in a hill forest in Peninsular Malaysia
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