Neotropical coastal mangrove forests are usually “zonal,” with certain mangrove species found
predominantly in the seaward portion of the habitat and other mangrove species on the more
landward portions of the coast. The earliest research on mangrove forests produced descriptions of species distribution from shore to land, without exploring the causes of the distributions.
The idea that zonation is caused by plant succession was first expressed by J. H. Davis in a study of
Recently the universal application of
To find a principle that explains the various distribution patterns, several researchers have looked
to salinity and its effects on mangrove. While mangroves can develop in fresh water, they can also thrive in salinities as high as 2.5 times that of seawater. However, those mangrove species found in freshwater habitats do well only in the absence of competition, thus suggesting that salinity tolerance is a critical factor in competitive success among mangrove species. Research suggests that mangroves will normally dominate highly saline regions, although not because they require salt. Rather, they are metabolically efficient (and hence grow well) in portions of an environment whose high salinity excludes plants adapted to lower salinities. Tides create different degrees of salinity along a coastline. The characteristic mangrove species of each zone should exhibit a higher metabolic efficiency at that salinity than will any potential invader, including other species of mangrove.
文中的This continuous process of accretion and succession 中SUCCESSION是个什么意思,后面又说道在某种情况下,succession will proceed according to
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