Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island

Population status and ecological preferences of the New Guinean endemic palm Sommieria leucophylla in a lowland forest of the North Salawati Island Nature Reserve were documented at six different habitat types: river bank, hill slope, hill top, intact, disturbed, and converted forests. Population si...

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Main Author: DIDIK WIDYATMOKO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bogor Agricultural University 2010-09-01
Series:Hayati Journal of Biosciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.ipb.ac.id/index.php/hayati/article/view/1691/734
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spelling doaj-6bf79bdd26ff4117a99b28e484c45efd2020-11-24T21:39:34ZengBogor Agricultural UniversityHayati Journal of Biosciences1978-30192086-40942010-09-01173137144Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati IslandDIDIK WIDYATMOKOPopulation status and ecological preferences of the New Guinean endemic palm Sommieria leucophylla in a lowland forest of the North Salawati Island Nature Reserve were documented at six different habitat types: river bank, hill slope, hill top, intact, disturbed, and converted forests. Population sizes varied spatially and were dominated by seedlings and juveniles, indicating a growing population. Individuals with stem heights of 0-100 cm and stem diameters of 2-3 cm dominated. The stem height class distribution showed a preponderance of individuals in the juvenile stage class and a strong right hand skew typical of populations in which recruitment and mortality were continuous and density dependent, rather than episodic. S. leucopylla preferred specific habitats with river bank and intact forest being the most suitable habitat. Although the palm tolerated hill slopes, the populations were low and even suppressed at hill tops, and seemed to be sensitive to disturbance and changes in water table. Mortality was higher among the early stages but very low in adults. There was little recruitment in disturbed sites and no establishment in converted forests. To conserve the most important remaining populations, it is crucial to protect the most suitable sites in the reserve.http://journal.ipb.ac.id/index.php/hayati/article/view/1691/734Sommieria leucophyllapopulation statushabitat typessurvivorship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author DIDIK WIDYATMOKO
spellingShingle DIDIK WIDYATMOKO
Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
Hayati Journal of Biosciences
Sommieria leucophylla
population status
habitat types
survivorship
author_facet DIDIK WIDYATMOKO
author_sort DIDIK WIDYATMOKO
title Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
title_short Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
title_full Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
title_fullStr Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
title_full_unstemmed Population Status and Ecological Preferences of the Palm Sommieria leucophylla Beccari in Salawati Island
title_sort population status and ecological preferences of the palm sommieria leucophylla beccari in salawati island
publisher Bogor Agricultural University
series Hayati Journal of Biosciences
issn 1978-3019
2086-4094
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Population status and ecological preferences of the New Guinean endemic palm Sommieria leucophylla in a lowland forest of the North Salawati Island Nature Reserve were documented at six different habitat types: river bank, hill slope, hill top, intact, disturbed, and converted forests. Population sizes varied spatially and were dominated by seedlings and juveniles, indicating a growing population. Individuals with stem heights of 0-100 cm and stem diameters of 2-3 cm dominated. The stem height class distribution showed a preponderance of individuals in the juvenile stage class and a strong right hand skew typical of populations in which recruitment and mortality were continuous and density dependent, rather than episodic. S. leucopylla preferred specific habitats with river bank and intact forest being the most suitable habitat. Although the palm tolerated hill slopes, the populations were low and even suppressed at hill tops, and seemed to be sensitive to disturbance and changes in water table. Mortality was higher among the early stages but very low in adults. There was little recruitment in disturbed sites and no establishment in converted forests. To conserve the most important remaining populations, it is crucial to protect the most suitable sites in the reserve.
topic Sommieria leucophylla
population status
habitat types
survivorship
url http://journal.ipb.ac.id/index.php/hayati/article/view/1691/734
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