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Research Article

The steady-state mosaic of disturbance and succession across an old-growth Central Amazon forest landscape

Jeffrey Q. Chambers, Robinson I. Negron-Juarez, Daniel Magnabosco Marra, Alan Di Vittorio, Joerg Tews, Dar Roberts, Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro, Susan E. Trumbore, and Niro Higuchi
PNAS March 5, 2013 110 (10) 3949-3954; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1202894110
Jeffrey Q. Chambers
aClimate Sciences Department, Earth Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720;
bEcology and Evolutionary Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118;
cInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Coordenação de Pesquisas de Silvicultura Tropical, 69060-001, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil;
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  • For correspondence: jchambers@lbl.gov
Robinson I. Negron-Juarez
bEcology and Evolutionary Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118;
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Daniel Magnabosco Marra
cInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Coordenação de Pesquisas de Silvicultura Tropical, 69060-001, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil;
dMax Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, 07745 Jena, Germany;
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Alan Di Vittorio
aClimate Sciences Department, Earth Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720;
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Joerg Tews
eNoreca Consulting, Inc., Wolfville, NS, Canada B4P 2R1; and
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Dar Roberts
fGeography Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
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Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro
cInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Coordenação de Pesquisas de Silvicultura Tropical, 69060-001, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil;
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Susan E. Trumbore
dMax Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, 07745 Jena, Germany;
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Niro Higuchi
cInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Coordenação de Pesquisas de Silvicultura Tropical, 69060-001, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil;
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  1. Edited by Peter M. Vitousek, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, and approved December 26, 2012 (received for review February 21, 2012)

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Abstract

Old-growth forest ecosystems comprise a mosaic of patches in different successional stages, with the fraction of the landscape in any particular state relatively constant over large temporal and spatial scales. The size distribution and return frequency of disturbance events, and subsequent recovery processes, determine to a large extent the spatial scale over which this old-growth steady state develops. Here, we characterize this mosaic for a Central Amazon forest by integrating field plot data, remote sensing disturbance probability distribution functions, and individual-based simulation modeling. Results demonstrate that a steady state of patches of varying successional age occurs over a relatively large spatial scale, with important implications for detecting temporal trends on plots that sample a small fraction of the landscape. Long highly significant stochastic runs averaging 1.0 Mg biomass⋅ha−1⋅y−1 were often punctuated by episodic disturbance events, resulting in a sawtooth time series of hectare-scale tree biomass. To maximize the detection of temporal trends for this Central Amazon site (e.g., driven by CO2 fertilization), plots larger than 10 ha would provide the greatest sensitivity. A model-based analysis of fractional mortality across all gap sizes demonstrated that 9.1–16.9% of tree mortality was missing from plot-based approaches, underscoring the need to combine plot and remote-sensing methods for estimating net landscape carbon balance. Old-growth tropical forests can exhibit complex large-scale structure driven by disturbance and recovery cycles, with ecosystem and community attributes of hectare-scale plots exhibiting continuous dynamic departures from a steady-state condition.

  • biodiversity
  • community composition
  • gap dynamics
  • NEP NEE NBP

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jchambers{at}lbl.gov.
  • Author contributions: J.Q.C., R.I.N.-J., D.M.M., S.E.T., and N.H. designed research; J.Q.C., R.I.N.-J., D.M.M., and G.H.P.M.R. performed research; J.Q.C., R.I.N.-J., A.D.V., J.T., and D.R. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; J.Q.C., R.I.N.-J., A.D.V., and J.T. analyzed data; and J.Q.C., R.I.N.-J., D.M.M., A.D.V., J.T., D.R., G.H.P.M.R., S.E.T., and N.H. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1202894110/-/DCSupplemental.

  • See Commentary on page 3711.

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Amazon forest steady-state mosaic
Jeffrey Q. Chambers, Robinson I. Negron-Juarez, Daniel Magnabosco Marra, Alan Di Vittorio, Joerg Tews, Dar Roberts, Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro, Susan E. Trumbore, Niro Higuchi
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Mar 2013, 110 (10) 3949-3954; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1202894110

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Amazon forest steady-state mosaic
Jeffrey Q. Chambers, Robinson I. Negron-Juarez, Daniel Magnabosco Marra, Alan Di Vittorio, Joerg Tews, Dar Roberts, Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro, Susan E. Trumbore, Niro Higuchi
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Mar 2013, 110 (10) 3949-3954; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1202894110
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