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Using tree population size structures to assess the impacts of cattle grazing and eucalypts plantations in subtropical South America

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Abstract

To evaluate the effects of distinct management of the matrix in which forest fragments are found upon plant populations thriving in forest remnants in south Brazil, we assessed the conservation status of populations of four woody species (Campomanesia rhombea, Diospyros incontans, Myrciaria cuspidata and Sebastiania commersoniana) through analyses of size structure. Analyzes were carried out at two scales. At a local scale, we consider populations in fragments surrounded by pastures or eucalypts forest plantations, and at a regional scale we also consider larger forest tracts taken as reference areas (Rio Grande do Sul Forest Inventory databank). Population size structures were summarized using the symmetry of height distributions. Small individual size classes prevailed at the local scale in fragments surrounded by eucalypts plantations, whereas in areas exposed to cattle ranching, populations of the same species consistently lack small individuals. At the regional scale, populations in fragments surrounded by pastures presented greater skewness (prevalence of small plants) than populations in reference areas, while populations surrounded by eucalypts plantations presented intermediate skewness. These results reinforce the notion that plantations have a higher conservation value for forest ecosystems than other commercial land uses, like cattle ranching. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

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Cattle ranching, Eucalypts plantations, Riparian forest fragments, Size structure, Woody species, conservation status, dicotyledon, ecosystem management, forest ecosystem, forest inventory, population size, ranching, riparian forest, size structure, species conservation, woody plant, Brazil, South America, Bos, Campomanesia, Cuspidata, Diospyros, Myrciaria, Sebastiania commersoniana

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English

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Biodiversity and Conservation, v. 19, n. 6, p. 1683-1698, 2010.

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