Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Data from: Successional shifts in tree demographic strategies in wet and dry Neotropical forests

  • Nadja Rüger (Creator)
  • Markus Schorn (Creator)
  • Stephan Kambach (Creator)
  • Robin L. Chazdon (Creator)
  • Caroline E. Farrior (Creator)
  • Jorge A. Meave (Creator)
  • Rodrigo Muñoz Aviles (Creator)
  • Michiel Van Breugel (Creator)
  • Lucy Amissah (Creator)
  • Frans Bongers (Creator)
  • Dylan Craven (Creator)
  • Bruno Hérault (Creator)
  • Catarina C. Jakovac (Creator)
  • Natalia Norden (Creator)
  • Lourens Poorter (Creator)
  • Masha van der Sande (Creator)
  • Christian Wirth (Creator)
  • Diego Delgado (Creator)
  • Daisy H. Dent (Creator)
  • Saara J. DeWalt (Creator)
  • Juan M. Dupuy (Creator)
  • Bryan Finegan (Creator)
  • Jefferson S. Hall (Creator)
  • José Luis Hernández-Stefanoni (Creator)
  • Omar R. Lopez (Creator)

Dataset

Description

This dataset summarizes demographic rates, abundances and basal area across a succession of ~800 (sub) tropical tree species to explore generalities in demographic trade-offs and successional shifts in demographic strategies across four Neotropical forests that cover a large rainfall gradient. We used repeated forest inventory data from chronosequences in two wet (Costa Rica, Panama) and two dry forests (Yucatán, Oaxaca, both Mexico) to quantify demographic rates of ~800 tree species. For each forest, we explored the main demographic trade-offs and assigned tree species to five demographic groups by performing a weighted Principal Component Analysis (PCA) that accounts for differences in sample size. We aggregated the basal area and abundance across demographic groups to identify successional shifts in demographic strategies over the entire successional gradient from very young (
Date made available31 Mar 2023
PublisherWageningen University & Research
Geographical coverageCosta Rica, Panama, Mexico

Cite this