Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba

Disturbances affect the spatial and temporal dynamics of ecosystems. The lack of long-term demographic data affects our understanding the effects of high intensity disturbances such as hurricanes. In this paper we assess population recovery of two epiphytic orchids, Broughtonia cubensis (Lindl.) Cog...

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Autores principales: Mújica, Ernesto, Raventós, Josep, González, Elaine, Bonet, Andreu
Formato: Online
Idioma:eng
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 2013
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/11534
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institution Universidad de Costa Rica
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language eng
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author Mújica, Ernesto
Raventós, Josep
González, Elaine
Bonet, Andreu
spellingShingle Mújica, Ernesto
Raventós, Josep
González, Elaine
Bonet, Andreu
Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
author_facet Mújica, Ernesto
Raventós, Josep
González, Elaine
Bonet, Andreu
author_sort Mújica, Ernesto
description Disturbances affect the spatial and temporal dynamics of ecosystems. The lack of long-term demographic data affects our understanding the effects of high intensity disturbances such as hurricanes. In this paper we assess population recovery of two epiphytic orchids, Broughtonia cubensis (Lindl.) Cogn. and Dendrophylax lindenii (Lindl.) Bentham ex Rolfe, for 7-8 years after Hurricane Ivan (September 2004, category 5, Saffir-Simpson scale). To analyze some spatial components, we applied recent techniques of marked point pattern analysis to ask two questions: 1) at level of phorophytes, was the height and basal diameter (DBH) related to the damage caused by hurricane Ivan, and 2) was the height of epiphytic orchids on phorophytes related to the damage, too? We found that phorophyte damage caused by the hurricane depends on the ecosystem in which the trees were found. Furthermore, damage to individuals of B. cubensis was independent of their height above ground, in contrast to those of D. lindenii. To assess orchid recovery we compared pre- and post-hurricane measures of vegetative traits: number of leaves and leaf area for B. cubensis and number of living roots and mean root length for the leafless D. lindenii. We also compared changes in the production of inflorescences, flowers, and fruits over this recovery period. We found that vegetative parts of B. cubensis recovered, whereas those of D. lindenii did not. However, neither reproductive effort nor success returned to pre-hurricane levels for either species. The greatest decline in fruit set was by D. lindenii, which may reflect a significant decline in availability of their sphingid pollinators. The relative population growth rate from 2004 to 2012 for B. cubensis indicates that the population has stabilized. Unfortunately, analysis of our eight-year data set (2003-2011) for D. lindenii shows negative population growth. Despite an evolutionary history exposed to severe periodic storms not all orchid species are resilient.
title Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
title_short Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
title_full Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
title_fullStr Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
title_full_unstemmed Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
title_sort long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from guanahacabibes peninsula, cuba
title_alt Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2013
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/11534
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AT gonzalezelaine longtermhurricaneeffectsonpopulationsoftwoepiphyticorchidspeciesfromguanahacabibespeninsulacuba
AT bonetandreu longtermhurricaneeffectsonpopulationsoftwoepiphyticorchidspeciesfromguanahacabibespeninsulacuba
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spelling LANKESTERIANA115342022-07-20T00:57:04Z Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba Long-term hurricane effects on populations of two epiphytic orchid species from Guanahacabibes Peninsula, Cuba Mújica, Ernesto Raventós, Josep González, Elaine Bonet, Andreu mepiphytes hurricane recovery orchidaceae caribbean mepiphytes hurricane recovery orchidaceae caribbean Disturbances affect the spatial and temporal dynamics of ecosystems. The lack of long-term demographic data affects our understanding the effects of high intensity disturbances such as hurricanes. In this paper we assess population recovery of two epiphytic orchids, Broughtonia cubensis (Lindl.) Cogn. and Dendrophylax lindenii (Lindl.) Bentham ex Rolfe, for 7-8 years after Hurricane Ivan (September 2004, category 5, Saffir-Simpson scale). To analyze some spatial components, we applied recent techniques of marked point pattern analysis to ask two questions: 1) at level of phorophytes, was the height and basal diameter (DBH) related to the damage caused by hurricane Ivan, and 2) was the height of epiphytic orchids on phorophytes related to the damage, too? We found that phorophyte damage caused by the hurricane depends on the ecosystem in which the trees were found. Furthermore, damage to individuals of B. cubensis was independent of their height above ground, in contrast to those of D. lindenii. To assess orchid recovery we compared pre- and post-hurricane measures of vegetative traits: number of leaves and leaf area for B. cubensis and number of living roots and mean root length for the leafless D. lindenii. We also compared changes in the production of inflorescences, flowers, and fruits over this recovery period. We found that vegetative parts of B. cubensis recovered, whereas those of D. lindenii did not. However, neither reproductive effort nor success returned to pre-hurricane levels for either species. The greatest decline in fruit set was by D. lindenii, which may reflect a significant decline in availability of their sphingid pollinators. The relative population growth rate from 2004 to 2012 for B. cubensis indicates that the population has stabilized. Unfortunately, analysis of our eight-year data set (2003-2011) for D. lindenii shows negative population growth. Despite an evolutionary history exposed to severe periodic storms not all orchid species are resilient. Disturbances affect the spatial and temporal dynamics of ecosystems. The lack of long-term demographic data affects our understanding the effects of high intensity disturbances such as hurricanes. In this paper we assess population recovery of two epiphytic orchids, Broughtonia cubensis (Lindl.) Cogn. and Dendrophylax lindenii (Lindl.) Bentham ex Rolfe, for 7-8 years after Hurricane Ivan (September 2004, category 5, Saffir-Simpson scale). To analyze some spatial components, we applied recent techniques of marked point pattern analysis to ask two questions: 1) at level of phorophytes, was the height and basal diameter (DBH) related to the damage caused by hurricane Ivan, and 2) was the height of epiphytic orchids on phorophytes related to the damage, too? We found that phorophyte damage caused by the hurricane depends on the ecosystem in which the trees were found. Furthermore, damage to individuals of B. cubensis was independent of their height above ground, in contrast to those of D. lindenii. To assess orchid recovery we compared pre- and post-hurricane measures of vegetative traits: number of leaves and leaf area for B. cubensis and number of living roots and mean root length for the leafless D. lindenii. We also compared changes in the production of inflorescences, flowers, and fruits over this recovery period. We found that vegetative parts of B. cubensis recovered, whereas those of D. lindenii did not. However, neither reproductive effort nor success returned to pre-hurricane levels for either species. The greatest decline in fruit set was by D. lindenii, which may reflect a significant decline in availability of their sphingid pollinators. The relative population growth rate from 2004 to 2012 for B. cubensis indicates that the population has stabilized. Unfortunately, analysis of our eight-year data set (2003-2011) for D. lindenii shows negative population growth. Despite an evolutionary history exposed to severe periodic storms not all orchid species are resilient. Universidad de Costa Rica 2013-08-11 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/11534 10.15517/lank.v0i0.11534 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2013: Lankesteriana: Volumen 13, Número 1-2 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2013: Lankesteriana: Volumen 13, Número 1-2 2215-2067 1409-3871 eng https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/11534/10879