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Dive into the research topics where Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

The steady-state mosaic of disturbance and succession across an old-growth Central Amazon forest landscape

Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Alan V. Di Vittorio; Joerg Tews; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Susan E. Trumbore; Niro Higuchi

Old-growth forest ecosystems comprise a mosaic of patches in different successional stages, with the fraction of the landscape in any particular state relatively constant over large temporal and spatial scales. The size distribution and return frequency of disturbance events, and subsequent recovery processes, determine to a large extent the spatial scale over which this old-growth steady state develops. Here, we characterize this mosaic for a Central Amazon forest by integrating field plot data, remote sensing disturbance probability distribution functions, and individual-based simulation modeling. Results demonstrate that a steady state of patches of varying successional age occurs over a relatively large spatial scale, with important implications for detecting temporal trends on plots that sample a small fraction of the landscape. Long highly significant stochastic runs averaging 1.0 Mg biomass⋅ha−1⋅y−1 were often punctuated by episodic disturbance events, resulting in a sawtooth time series of hectare-scale tree biomass. To maximize the detection of temporal trends for this Central Amazon site (e.g., driven by CO2 fertilization), plots larger than 10 ha would provide the greatest sensitivity. A model-based analysis of fractional mortality across all gap sizes demonstrated that 9.1–16.9% of tree mortality was missing from plot-based approaches, underscoring the need to combine plot and remote-sensing methods for estimating net landscape carbon balance. Old-growth tropical forests can exhibit complex large-scale structure driven by disturbance and recovery cycles, with ecosystem and community attributes of hectare-scale plots exhibiting continuous dynamic departures from a steady-state condition.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Large-scale wind disturbances promote tree diversity in a Central Amazon Forest

Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Niro Higuchi; Susan E. Trumbore; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Joaquim dos Santos; Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Björn Reu; Christian Wirth

Canopy gaps created by wind-throw events, or blowdowns, create a complex mosaic of forest patches varying in disturbance intensity and recovery in the Central Amazon. Using field and remote sensing data, we investigated the short-term (four-year) effects of large (>2000 m2) blowdown gaps created during a single storm event in January 2005 near Manaus, Brazil, to study (i) how forest structure and composition vary with disturbance gradients and (ii) whether tree diversity is promoted by niche differentiation related to wind-throw events at the landscape scale. In the forest area affected by the blowdown, tree mortality ranged from 0 to 70%, and was highest on plateaus and slopes. Less impacted areas in the region affected by the blowdown had overlapping characteristics with a nearby unaffected forest in tree density (583±46 trees ha−1) (mean±99% Confidence Interval) and basal area (26.7±2.4 m2 ha−1). Highly impacted areas had tree density and basal area as low as 120 trees ha−1 and 14.9 m2 ha−1, respectively. In general, these structural measures correlated negatively with an index of tree mortality intensity derived from satellite imagery. Four years after the blowdown event, differences in size-distribution, fraction of resprouters, floristic composition and species diversity still correlated with disturbance measures such as tree mortality and gap size. Our results suggest that the gradients of wind disturbance intensity encompassed in large blowdown gaps (>2000 m2) promote tree diversity. Specialists for particular disturbance intensities existed along the entire gradient. The existence of species or genera taking an intermediate position between undisturbed and gap specialists led to a peak of rarefied richness and diversity at intermediate disturbance levels. A diverse set of species differing widely in requirements and recruitment strategies forms the initial post-disturbance cohort, thus lending a high resilience towards wind disturbances at the community level.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2010

Widespread Amazon forest tree mortality from a single cross-basin squall line event

Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Giuliano Guimaraes; Hongcheng Zeng; Carlos F. M. Raupp; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Sassan Saatchi; Bruce Walker Nelson; Niro Higuchi


Forest Ecology and Management | 2012

Allometric models for estimating above- and below-ground biomass in Amazonian forests at São Gabriel da Cachoeira in the upper Rio Negro, Brazil

Adriano José Nogueira Lima; Rempei Suwa; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Takuya Kajimoto; Joaquim dos Santos; Roseana Pereira da Silva; Cacilda Adélia Sampaio de Souza; Priscila Castro de Barros; Hideyuki Noguchi; Moriyoshi Ishizuka; Niro Higuchi


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2011

Detection of subpixel treefall gaps with Landsat imagery in Central Amazon forests

Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Sami W. Rifai; Niro Higuchi


Atmosphere | 2017

Windthrow Variability in Central Amazonia

Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Hillary S. Jenkins; Carlos F. M. Raupp; William J. Riley; Lara M. Kueppers; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Maria Terezinha F. Monteiro; Luis A. Candido; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Niro Higuchi


Biogeosciences | 2016

Predicting biomass of hyperdiverse and structurally complex central Amazonian forests - a virtual approach using extensive field data

Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Niro Higuchi; Susan E. Trumbore; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Joaquim dos Santos; Vilany Matilla Colares Carneiro; Adriano José Nogueira Lima; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Frédéric Holzwarth; Björn Reu; Christian Wirth


Forest Ecology and Management | 2016

Mechanical vulnerability and resistance to snapping and uprooting for Central Amazon tree species

Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Jeffrey Q. Chambers; Chris J. Peterson; Susan E. Trumbore; D. Magnabosco Marra; Christian Wirth; Jeffery B. Cannon; Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Adriano José Nogueira Lima; E.V.C.M. de Paula; Joaquim dos Santos; N. Higuchi


Biogeosciences | 2016

Windthrows increase soil carbon stocks in a Central Amazon forest

Leandro dos Santos; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Susan E. Trumbore; Plínio Barbosa de Camargo; Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez; Adriano José Nogueira Lima; Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Joaquim dos Santos; Niro Higuchi


Jarq-japan Agricultural Research Quarterly | 2014

Allometry for juvenile trees in an Amazonian forest after wind disturbance

Gabriel H. P. M. Ribeiro; Rempei Suwa; Daniel Magnabosco Marra; Adriano José Nogueira Lima; Takuya Kajimoto; Moriyoshi Ishizuka; Niro Higuchi

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Robinson I. Negrón-Juárez

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Takuya Kajimoto

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Alan V. Di Vittorio

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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