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Spatial patterns of two rodent-dispersed rain forest trees Carapa procera (Meliaceae) and Vouacapoua americana (Caesalpiniaceae) at Paracou, French Guiana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 1999

Pierre-Michel Forget
Affiliation:
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire d'Ecologie Générale, UMR 8571 CNRS-MNHN, 4 Avenue du Petit Château, F-91800 Brunoy, France. E-mail: forget@mnhn.fr.
François Mercier
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Biométrie, Génétique et Biologie des Populations – CNRS UMR 5558, Université Claude Bernard, 43 boulevard du 11 Novembre 1918, F-69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France
Frédérique Collinet
Affiliation:
Direction Régionale de l'Office National des Forêts 5, rue Girardet, F-54052 Nancy Cedex, France

Abstract

The spatial distribution of two rain forest tree species, Carapa procera (Meliaceae) and Vouacapoua americana (Caesalpiniaceae) was analysed within and between plots of different sizes (6.25 and 25 ha) at Paracou, French Guiana. The L(d) function was used to characterize spatial patterns, and the Lij(d) intertype to study independancy between young and adult trees. Although both species are known to be dispersed by caviomorph rodents within short distances (c. 10–20 m and up to 50 m) of parent tree crowns, the analysis of tree positions led to different spatial patterns between species depending on soil drainage characteristics. Overall, while V. americana showed a strongly aggregated spatial distribution, C. procera had a weaker propensity to depart from complete spatial randomness (CSR). A complex distribution, sometimes clustered in areas with hydromorphic soils (swamps and around streams) and sometimes very near CSR outside these areas characterized the C. procera population. When C. procera tree aggregation occurred, there was a slight attraction between juveniles and adults. The aggregation of V. americana trees was evidenced at different levels depending on the scale of investigation. Within small plots (6.25 ha), a first level of aggregation with short distance radii of c. 10–25 m giving small clusters, and a second level which is composed of small clusters aggregated at c. 40–50 m distance radius, were observed. A third level of aggregation was suggested by analysing the tree population at the larger scale (25 ha) whose boundaries outside the plot were not delimited. Aggregation of V. americana trees at all levels was enhanced by a strong attraction between juveniles and adults. These results were discussed in light of seed and seedling ecology, especially with regard to seedling and sapling gap-dependence and soil drainage, which likely affected the recruitment of juvenile trees, and henceforth final tree spatial pattern.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1999 Cambridge University Press

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