Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Emerging Flora In Gradient Of Mining Post Succession In Condoto, Chocó

Abstract

A comparative analysis of the plant community was made in three areas affected by mining and a control forest in Jigualito (Condoto). To determine changes in the composition and structure of the vegetation, we selected three abandoned mines with time periods of 5, 15 and 30 years and a forest without mining history. In each area 5 plots of 5 x 20 were installed, equivalent to 500m², the vegetation present in each selected area was recorded and measured. In abandoned mines, the distribution of wealth, composition and structure of the plant community is conditioned by the chronology of mining abandonment and the evolution of succession levels, evidencing the increase in wealth and the decrease in abundance as temporality increased of cessation of activity, favoring the increase of diversity and the appearance of a more complex structure. Therefore it can be inferred that, after 3 decades, the plant community is in approximately less than 50% of its initial conditions in numerical terms of composition, however, the floristic arrangement is completely different from that of the control forest, therefore , the mining activity causes a series of areas with different floristic arrangements.

Keywords

Mechanized mining, Chocó Departament, successional states, degraded areas, humid forest.

PDF (Español)

References

[1] O. Muñóz-Jiménez, J. C. López Acosta, and R. Villegas Patraca, “Diversidad y estructura vegetal en un paisaje antropizado de La Venta, Juchitán, Oaxaca, México,” Acta Bot. Mex., no. 126, pp. 1–24, 2019, doi: 10.21829/abm126.2019.1413.

[2] H. Fonseca, “Minería: Impactos sociales y ambientales,” in Movimiento Mundial por los Bosques Tropicales, 2004, p. 180.

[3] W. Barthlott, V. Schmit-Neuerburg, J. Nieder, and S. Engwald, “Diversity and abundance of vascular epiphytes: A comparison of secondary vegetation and primary montane rain forest in the Venezuelan Andes,” Plant Ecol., vol. 152, no. 2, pp. 145–156, 2001, doi: 10.1023/A:1011483901452.

[4] G. Andrade Pérez and L. Castro, “Degradación, pérdida y transformación de la biodiversidad continental en Colombia: invitación a una interpretación socioecológica,” Ambient. y Desarro., vol. 16, no. 30, pp. 53–71, 2012.

[5] D. Marcelo, W. Bank, and N. Rodr, Biodiversidad Y Actividad Humana : Relaciones En Ecosistemas De Bosque. 2007.

[6] H. García Romero, “Deforestación en Colombia : Retos y perspectivas,” El Desafío del Desarro. Sustentable en América Lat., pp. 123–142, 2013, [Online]. Available: http://www.repository.fedesarrollo.org.co/bitstream/11445/337/3/KAS SOPLA_Deforestacion en Colombia retos y perspectivas.pdf.

[7] H. Valois-Cuesta and C. Martínez-Ruiz, “Vulnerabilidad de los bosques naturales en el chocó biogeográfico colombiano: Actividad minera y conservación de la biodiversidad,” Bosque, vol. 37, no. 2, pp. 295–305, 2016, doi: 10.4067/S0717-92002016000200008.

[8] J. O. Rangel-Ch., “Amenazas a la biota y a los ecosistemas del choco biogeografico,” in Colombia Diversidad Biótica IV. El Chocó Biogeográfico, 2004.

[9] G. Ramírez-Moreno and E. Ledezma-Rentería, “Efectos de las actividades Socio-económicas(Minería y explotación maderera) sobre los bosques del departamento del choco,” Rev. Inst. Univ. Tecnológica del Chocó D.L.C., vol. 26, pp. 58–65, 2007.

[10] H. V. Cuesta, “Sucesión primaria y ecología de la revegetación de selvas degradadas por minería en el Chocó, Colombia: bases para su restauración ecológica,” 2016.

[11] I. C. Poveda-M, C. Rojas-P, A. Rudas-Ll., and J. O. Rangel-Ch., “El Chocó Biogeográfico: Ambiente Físico,” in Colombia Diversidad Biótica IV, 2011, pp. 1–21.

[12] G. Ramirez, M. Direct, and G. Galeno, “Estudio de las comunidades de Palmas en dos regiones fitogeográficas del Chocó-Colombia,” 2010.

[13] O. Rangel-Ch and G. Lozano-C, “Un perfil de vegetación entre la plata (Huila) y el volcan del purace,” Caldasia, vol. XIV, no. 68–70, pp. 503–547, 1986.

[14] Alwyn H. Gentry, A Field Guide to the Families and Genera of Woody Plants of North West South America: (Colombia, Ecuador, Peru with Supplementary Notes). 1993.

[15] V.-M. G, Fundamentos y metodología para la identificación de plantas. Proyecto Biopac{\’\i}fico, Ministerio del Medio Ambiente, PNUD, GEF, 1997.

[16] R.-C. H. J. O and V. A., “Métodos de estudios de la vegetación,” in Colombia diversidad Biótica II. Tipos de vegetación en Colombia., Universidad Nacional de Colombia., Ed. Bogota, 1997, pp. 59–82.

[17] C. E. Moreno, Métodos para medir la biodiversidad. 2001.

[18] R. K. Colwell, “EstimateS: Statistical estimation of species richness and shared species from samples. Versión 9. User’s Guide and application.” 2013, [Online]. Available: http://purl.oclc.org/estimates.

[19] Ø. Hammer, D. A. T. Harper, and P. D. Ryan, “PAST: Paleontological Statistics software package for education and data analysis,” Palaeontol. Electron., vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 1–9, 2001.

[20] A. E. Magurran, Ecological Diversity and Its Measurement. 1988.

[21] H. Valois-Cuesta and C. Martínez-Ruiz, “Especies vegetales colonizadoras de áreas perturbadas por la minería en bosques pluviales tropicales del Chocó, Colombia,” Biota Colomb., vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 87–103, 2017, doi: 10.21068/c2017.v18n01a7.

[22] A. H. Gentry, “Riqueza de especies y composición florística de las comunidades de plantas de la región del Chocó: una actualización,” Colomb. Pacífico, vol. 1, pp. 201–219, 1993.

[23] A. Asprilla, C. Mosquera, H. Valoyes, H. C. Y, and F. García., “Composición florística de un bosque pluvial tropical (bp-T) en la parcela permanente de investigación en biodiversidad (PPIB) en Salero, Chocó.,” Unión Panam., pp. 39–44, 2003.

[24] L. A, C. Donoso, and J. Aravena, “La conservación del bosque nativo de Chile: problemas y desafíos.,” Editor. Univ., p. 477, 1997.

[25] M. S. Grigera, Dora; Brion, Cecilia; Chiapella, Jorge O.; Pillado, “Las formas de vida de las plantas como indicadores de factores ambientales,” Medio Ambient., vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 11–29, 1996.

[26] O. J. Vidal and A. Reif, “Effect of a tourist-ignited wildfire on Nothofagus pumilio forests at Torres del Paine biosphere reserve , Chile ( Southern Patagonia ),” Bosque, vol. 32, no. 1, pp. 64–76, 2011.

[27] F. Sguizzatto, S. V. Martins, J. A. A. Meira Neto, J. L. Lani, and I. E. Pires, “Structure of the shrub and tree vegetation colonizing an area degraded by kaolin mining, in Brás Pires, MG, Brazil,” Rev. Arvore, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 107–116, 2006, doi: 10.1590/s0100-67622006000100013.

[28] H. E. Esquivel, F. Tinoco, and A. J. Torres, “La Sucesión Vegetal En Los Lodos Fluviovolcánicos De Armero-Tolima-Colombia 30 Años Después De La Erupción Del Volcán Arenas Del Nevado Del Ruiz,” Caldasia, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 101–116, Jan. 2016, [Online]. Available: https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/cal/article/view/57832/56175.

[29] T. Krömer, S. R. Gradstein, and A. Acebey, “Diversity and ecology of vascular epiphytes in natural montane forests and fallows of Bolivia,” Ecol. en Boliv., vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 23–33, 2007.

[30] F. Werner, J. Homeier, and S. Gradstein, “Diversity of vascular epiphytes on isolated remnant trees in the montane forest belt of southern Ecuador,” Ecotropica, vol. 11, pp. 21–40, 2005.

[31] N. Köster, K. Friedrich, J. Nieder, and W. Barthlott, “Conservation of epiphyte diversity in an andean landscape transformed by human land use,” Conserv. Biol., vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 911–919, 2009, doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.01164.x.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.