Browsing by Author "Aravena, JC"
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- ItemDisturbance and regeneration dynamics of an old-growth North Patagonian rain forest in Chiloe Island, Chile(2004) Gutiérrez, AG; Armesto, JJ; Aravena, JC1 Few studies have addressed the mechanisms of coexistence of shade-tolerant and intolerant tree species in the canopy of old-growth, lowland rain forests of southern South America. We explored the hypothesis that their forest dynamics result from frequent, single tree-fall gap episodes.
- ItemSuccessional changes in soil nitrogen availability, non-symbiotic nitrogen fixation and carbon/nitrogen ratios in southern Chilean forest ecosystems(2004) Pérez, CA; Carmona, MR; Aravena, JC; Armesto, JJVast areas of southern Chile are now covered by second-growth forests because of fire and logging. To study successional patterns after moderate-intensity, anthropogenic fire disturbance, we assessed differences in soil properties and N fluxes across a chronosequence of seven successional stands (2-130 years old). We examined current predictions of successional theory concerning changes in the N cycle in forest ecosystems. Seasonal fluctuations of net N mineralization (N-min) in surface soil and N availability (N-a; N-a=NH4+-N+NO3--N) in upper and deep soil horizons were positively correlated with monthly precipitation. In accordance with theoretical predictions, stand age was positively, but weakly related to both N-a (r(2)=0.282, P<0.001) and total N (N-tot; r(2)=0.192, P<0.01), and negatively related to soil C/N ratios (r(2)=0.187, P<0.01) in surface soils. A weak linear increase in soil N-min (upper plus deep soil horizons) was found across the chronosequence (r(2)=0.124, P<0.022). N-min occurred at modest rates in early successional stands, suggesting that soil disturbance did not impair microbial processes. The relationship between N fixation (N-fix) in the litter layer and stand age best fitted a quadratic model (r(2)=0.228, P<0.01). In contrast to documented successional trends for most temperate, tropical and Mediterranean forests, non-symbiotic N-fix in the litter layer is a steady N input to unpolluted southern temperate forests during mid and late succession, which may compensate for hydrological losses of organic N from old-growth ecosystems.