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Stand structure and woody species diversity in relation to stand stratification in a subtropical evergreen broadleaf forest, Okinawa Island
Authors:S. M. Feroz  A. Hagihara  M. Yokota
Affiliation:(1) Laboratory of Ecology and Systematics, Faculty of Science, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan
Abstract:Stand structure and woody species diversity in a subtropical evergreen broadleaf forest grown in a silicate habitat, Okinawa Island, have been investigated on the basis of stand stratification. The forest stand consisted of four layers. The floristic composition of the top and the lower three layers was only slightly similar, although approximately one-third of the species were common to them. Mean tree weight decreased from the top toward the bottom layer whereas tree density increased from the top downward. This trend resembled the mean weight–density trajectory of self-thinning plant populations. The relationship between mean tree height and tree density for the upper two layers supported Yamakurarsquos quasi –1/2 power law of tree height. The values of the Shannon–Wiener index, Hprime, and the equitability index, Jprime, tended to increase from the top layer downward except for the bottom layer. The values of Hprime and Jprime were, respectively, 4.83 bit and 0.82 for trees taller than 0.10 m. The lower layers contained many species of smaller height. High species diversity of the forest depended on small trees in the lower layers. Conservation of small trees in the lower layers, especially the bottom layer, is indispensable for sound maintenance of Okinawan evergreen broadleaf forests.
Keywords:Quasi –  1/2 power law of tree height  Small tree  Stand stratification  Subtropical evergreen broadleaf forest  Woody species diversity
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