S. Fujisaka et al., Weedy fields and forests: interactions between land use and the composition of plant communities in the Peruvian Amazon, AGR ECO ENV, 78(2), 2000, pp. 175-186
Slash-and-burn agriculture is a sequence of interactions between farmers an
d ecosystems, which includes forest, cropping, fallow, and cropping after f
allow. In sampling across this sequence in Pucallpa, Peru, 235 plant specie
s were recorded in the forest, of which 143 were not found in any successiv
e land use. However, plants not occurring in the forest colonized fields an
d fallow. In total, 595 species were identified across treatments. Changes
in communities generally reflected the replacement of shade-tolerant plants
, with seed dispersed by bats, other mammals, ants, and larger birds, and b
y pioneer plants adapted to open conditions and producing larger numbers of
small seed, dispersed by smaller birds and the wind. Each form of land use
hosted 7-25% of the original forest species, plus 13-66 plant species adap
ted to that land use. As field conditions changed over time, different sets
of more competitive weeds emerged. As a response, farmers changed crops, f
allowed fields, and cleared more forest. Farmers were most concerned about
Rottboellia cochinchinensis (Lour.) Clayton in fields after fallow, and Imp
erata brasilinesis Trin., an indicator of land degradation. Older fallow wa
s similar to forest in many respects, although species composition differed
. Farmers named useful species across treatments, but counts of these were
very low, suggesting high human intervention in the forest and heavy pressu
re on such species in all land uses. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rig
hts reserved.