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Species association in tropical montane rain forest at two successional stages in Diaoluo Mountain, Hainan

Species association is one of the basic concepts in community succession. There are different viewpoints on how species interaction changes with the progress of succession. In order to assess these relationships, we examined species associations in the tropical montane rain forest at early and late...

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Published in:Frontiers of forestry in China 2008-09, Vol.3 (3), p.308-314
Main Authors: Liu, Fude, Wang, Wenjin, Zhang, Ming, Zheng, Jianwei, Wang, Zhongsheng, Zhang, Shiting, Yang, Wenjie, An, Shuqing
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container_title Frontiers of forestry in China
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creator Liu, Fude
Wang, Wenjin
Zhang, Ming
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An, Shuqing
description Species association is one of the basic concepts in community succession. There are different viewpoints on how species interaction changes with the progress of succession. In order to assess these relationships, we examined species associations in the tropical montane rain forest at early and late successional stages in Diaoluo Mountain, Hainan Island. Based on data from a 2 × 2 contingency table of species presence or absence, statistical methods including analysis of species association and X 2 tests were applied. The results show that: 1) an overall positive association was present among tree species in the communities during the two successional stages and were statistically significant at the late stage. The number of species pairs with positive and negative associations decreased throughout the process of succession, while the number with null associations was greatly increased. The same trend existed among the dominant and companion species. The results indicate that the communities are developing towards a stable stage where the woody species coexist in harmony. 2) In the early-established and later invading species, all positive associations were not significant. Compared with positive and null associations, fewer negative associations were found. This implies that these species are inclined to coexist independently through portioning of resources. 3) Among the later invading species, positive associations were significant and no negative associations were found which suggest that these species have similar adaptive ability in the habitat and occupied overlapping niches in the community.
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subjects Associations
Biodiversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Contingency tables
Ecologists
Forestry
Life Sciences
Plant species
Rain
Rainforests
Research Article
Statistical methods
Studies
Vegetation
title Species association in tropical montane rain forest at two successional stages in Diaoluo Mountain, Hainan
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