378 Chris J. Peterson and Walter P. Carson
100
Intact
Cut
80
60
% Survival
Psychotria berterianaPsychotria brachiataTabebuia heterophylla
Jacaranda copaia
Palicourea croceoides
Vochysia ferruginea
Cedrala odorata
Engelhardia spicata
Annona spraguei
Swietenia macrophylla
Manilkara chicleGuarea guidonia
Ormposia macrocalyx
Posoqueria latifoliaPrestoea montanaDacryodes excelsa
Sterculia apetalaSpondias mombin
Calophyllum calabaVirola surinamensisHymenaea courbaril
Beilschmiedia sp.
Andira inermis
Calophyllum longifolium
Dipteryx panamensis
Carapa guianensis
40
20
0
Species (in order of increasing seed size)
Figure 22.3 Survival of tree seedlings transplanted into or germinating in intact grassland or pasture vegetation,
and into plots where vegetation had been cut, for 27 species. Pooled from Gerhardt (1993), Hardwicket al.(1997),
Zimmermanet al.(2000), and Hooperet al.(2002). Species are arranged in order of increasing seed size, from left
to right.
IS THE NUCLEATION MODEL A
VIABLE CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
FOR TROPICAL SUCCESSION?
Relative to succession followin ga griculture in
temperate regions, facilitation appears to play a
more prominent role in the tropics. The colo-
nization of woody species beneath both remnant
trees and early colonizin gshrubs and within
plantations (Vieira et al. 1994, Slocum and
Horvitz2000,Slocum2001,ZanneandChapman
2001, Carriereet al. 2002, Holl 2002) are clear
examples of facilitation operatin gto produce
expandin gpatches as predicted by the nucle-
ation model. Thus, much of the variation in the
woody species composition, richness, and rate
of succession may be explained by the initial
abundance and diversity of trees that extend
above the herbaceous layer. In addition, favorable
microsites such as rottin glo gs may also provide
foci for woody species establishment and thus the
formation of distinct patches where woody veg-
etation becomes established. Early successional
communities with few or no remnant trees or a
paucity of key microsites may have very slow rates
of succession. This strongly supports predictions
of the nucleation model where patches of woody
vegetation become established within a matrix of
graminoids and eventually coalesce. Thus, while
it is incomplete as a full conceptual framework,
the nucleation model does describe the gen-
eral dynamics of early post-agricultural succes-
sion, though more research is clearly needed.
Combinin gthe nucleation model with realistic