Journal
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 797-807Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2011.01691.x
Keywords
life-table response experiment; matrix models; Mexico; nontimber forest products; sustainable harvest; Tillandsia macdougallii; Tillandsia violaceae
Funding
- Fondos Mixtos del Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia y la Secretaria del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (FOSEMARNAT) [2004-01-244]
- Fundacion Alfredo Harp Helu
- Comision de Operacion y Fomento de Actividades Academicas of Instituto Politecnico Nacional
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Hundreds of epiphytic bromeliads species are harvested from the wild for trade and for cultural uses, but little is known about the effects of this harvest. We assessed the potential demographic effects of harvesting from the wild on 2 epiphytic bromeliads: Tillandsia macdougallii, an atmospheric bromeliad (adsorbs water and nutrients directly from the atmosphere), and T. violaceae, a tank bromeliad (accumulates water and organic material between its leaves). We also examined an alternative to harvesting bromeliads from trees-the collection of fallen bromeliads from the forest floor. We censused populations of T. macdougallii each year from 2005 to 2010 and of T. violaceae from 2005 to 2008, in Oaxaca, Mexico. We also measured monthly fall rates of bromeliads over 1 year and monitored the survival of fallen bromeliads on the forest floor. The tank bromeliad had significantly higher rates of survival, reproduction, and stochastic population growth rates (lambda(s)) than the atmospheric bromeliad, but lambda(s) for both species were < 1, which suggests that the populations will decline even without harvest. Elasticity patterns differed between species, but in both, survival of large individuals had high elasticity values. No fallen bromeliads survived more than 1.5 years on the forest floor and the rate of bromeliad fall was comparable to current harvest rates. Low rates of population growth recorded for the species we studied and other epiphytic bromeliads and high elasticity values for the vital rates that were most affected by harvest suggest that commercial harvesting in the wild of these species is not sustainable. We propose the collection of fallen bromeliads as an ecologically and, potentially, economically viable alternative.
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