4.5 Article

FLOWERING PHENOLOGY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT OF BIG-LEAF MAHOGANY SWIETENIA MACROPHYLLA IN BRAZILIAN AMAZONIA

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 100, 期 11, 页码 2293-2305

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1300087

关键词

logging impacts; Meliaceae; population genetic structure; reproductive phenology; sustainable forest management; synchronous flowering; tropical trees

资金

  1. USDA Forest Service International Institute of Tropical Forestry
  2. ITTO Fellowship Program
  3. USAID Brasil
  4. ITTO-CITES Program for Implementing CITES Listings of Tropical Timber Species
  5. The College of Wooster
  6. Charles A. and Anne Morrow Lindbergh Foundation

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Premise of the study: Flowering phenology is a crucial determinant of reproductive success and offspring genetic diversity in plants. We measure the flowering phenology of big-leaf mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla, Meliaceae), a widely distributed neotropical tree, and explore how disturbance from logging impacts its reproductive biology. Methods: We use a crown scoring system to estimate the timing and duration of population-level flowering at three forest sites in the Brazilian Amazon over a five-year period. We combine this information with data on population structure and spatial distribution to consider the implications of logging for population flowering patterns and reproductive success. Key results: Mahogany trees as small as 14 cm diam flowered, but only trees > 30 cm diam flowered annually or supra-annually. Mean observed flowering periods by focal trees ranged from 18-34 d, and trees flowered sequentially during 3-4 mo beginning in the dry season. Focal trees demonstrated significant interannual correlation in flowering order. Estimated population-level flowering schedules resembled that of the focal trees, with temporal isolation between early and late flowering trees. At the principal study site, conventional logging practices eliminated 87% of mahogany trees > 30 cm diam and an estimated 94% of annual pre-logging floral effort. Conclusions: Consistent interannual patterns of sequential flowering among trees create incompletely isolated subpopulations, constraining pollen flow. After harvests, surviving subcommercial trees will have fewer, more distant, and smaller potential partners, with probable consequences for post-logging regeneration. These results have important implications for the sustainability of harvesting systems for tropical timber species.

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