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BCI, Panama |
Barro Colorado Island (BCI) has been the
focus of intensive research on lowland
tropical moist forest since 1923, and
its flora is better known than any site
of comparable size throughout the world.
The Smithsonian Tropical Research
Institute and Princeton University
established the first Forest Dynamics
Plot at BCI in 1980, as part of its
comprehensive program of research in
tropical forest biology, which includes
plant physiology, canopy biology, and
animal ecology. The first census was
completed in 1982, revealing a total of
approximately 240,000 stems of 303
species of trees and shrubs more than 1
cm in diameter at breast height.
Recensuses of the plot in 1985, 1990,
and 1995 revealed the remarkable
dynamism and instability of tropical
tree populations. Turnover is very fast
by temperate forest standards, with
average residency time of a tree in the
canopy layer at only about 45 years.
Between 1982 and 1985, 40% of the tree
species in the plot changed by more than
10% in total abundance, apparently as
the result of a severe El Niño drought
in 1982 that elevated death rates to up
to twenty times those of non-drought
years. Researchers are currently
analyzing the effects of the recent 1998
El Niño. In addition, studies of canopy
cover suggest that forests of central
Panama are changing due to a long-term
decline in rainfall. These discoveries
indicate that tropical forest may be
much more vulnerable to global climate
change than has previously been
supposed. The plot is maintained by the
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.
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items are from between 29 Jul 2008 & 15 Jun 2009.










