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- Title
LANDSCAPE AND REGIONAL IMPACTS OF HURRICANES IN PUERTO RICO.
- Authors
Emery R. Boose; Mayra I. Serrano; David R. Foster
- Abstract
Puerto Rico is subject to frequent and severe impacts from hurricanes, whose long-term ecological role must be assessed on a scale of centuries. In this study we applied a method for reconstructing hurricane disturbance regimes developed in an earlier study of hurricanes in New England. Patterns of actual wind damage from historical records were analyzed for 85 hurricanes since European settlement in 1508. A simple meteorological model (HURRECON) was used to reconstruct the impacts of 43 hurricanes since I 851. Long-term effects of topography on a landscape scale in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (LEF) were simulated with a simple topographic exposure model (EXPOS). Average return intervals across Puerto Rico for F0 damage (loss of leaves and branches) and F! damage (scattered blowdowns, small gaps) on the Fujita scale were 4 and 6 years, respectively. At higher damage levels, a gradient was created by the direction of the storm tracks and the weakening of hurricanes over the interior mountains. Average return intervals for F2 damage (extensive blowdowns) and F3 damage (forests leveled) ranged from 15 to 33 years and 50 to 150 years, respectively, from east to west. In the LEF, the combination of steep topography and constrained peak wind directions created a complex mosaic of topographic exposure and protection, with average return intervals for F3 damage ranging from 50 years to >150 years. Actual forest damage was strongly dependent on land-use history and the effects of recent hurricanes. Annual and decadal timing of hunicanes varied widely. There was no clear centennial-scale trend in the number of major hurricanes over the historical period.
- Subjects
PUERTO Rico; HURRICANES; NATURAL disasters; HURRICANE tracks; ENVIRONMENTAL geography
- Publication
Ecological Monographs, 2004, Vol 74, Issue 2, p335
- ISSN
0012-9615
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1890/02-4057