PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Regeneration of Ostrya carpinifolia Scop. forest after coppicing : modelling of changes in species diversity and composition

Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
In temperate forest ecosystems, management is one of the most relevant factors that can drive the temporal pattern of species. As species in an ecosystem show susceptibility to stress and disturbance, it is useful to take into account the plant community .compositional dimension., which derives from species behaviour and ecological attributes and provides information on the mechanisms underlying species assemblages. Taking into account the influence of environmental factors on species diversity and composition, in order to determine the most suitable ecological behaviour type of each species, the research aim was to generate a model for Ostrya carpinifolia coppiced woods (central Italy) that describes forest ecosystem regeneration after coppicing by the assessment of change in the composition of ecological behaviour types. Vascular species cover percentage, field data, soil data, light intensity at the undergrowth, dominant tree layer cover and time since last logging were recorded for 63 plots covering 400 m2 each (20 x 20 m), randomly selected within a set of homogeneous macro-environmental conditions. Low species richness is related to stressing factors (acid soil, high soil skeleton percentage), while high species richness is linked to high light intensity at the undergrowth level due to scarce canopy cover soon after coppicing. The driving forces affecting floristic composition, highlighted through multi-response permutation procedures (MRPP) were light intensity at the undergrowth, regenerative phase, dominant tree layer cover, acidity, presence/absence of outcropping rock or rock fragments and total nitrogen content. Six species groups, each one characterized by homogeneous ecological behaviour, were defined by indicator species analysis (ISA) and tested using bioindication values analysis. Floristic successional change, related to time since last coppicing, turned out to follow an ecological cycling process characterized by cyclical occurrence/disappearance of species belonging to the six groups.
Rocznik
Strony
483--494
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 69 poz.,Rys., tab.,
Twórcy
autor
autor
autor
autor
Bibliografia
  • 1. Alard D., Poudevigne I. 2000 – Diversity patterns in grasslands along a landscape gradient in northwestern France – J. Veg. Sci. 11: 287–294.
  • 2. Aubert M., Alard D., Bureau F. 2003 – Diversity of plant assemblages in managed temperate forests: a case study in Normandy (France) – Forest Ecol. Manag. 175: 321–337.
  • 3. Bartha S., Merolli A., Campetella G., Canullo R. 2008 – Changes of vascular plant diversity along a chronosequence of beech coppice stands, central Apennines, Italy – Pl. Biosystems, 142: 572–583.
  • 4. Bengtsson J., Nilsson S.G., Franc A., Menozzi P. 2000 – Biodiversity, disturbances, ecosystem function and management of European forests – Forest Ecol. Manag. 132: 39–50.
  • 5. Bergmeier E., Dimopoulos P. 2001 – Fagus sylvatica forest vegetation in Greece: Syntaxonomy and gradient analysis – J. Veg. Sci. 12: 109–126.
  • 6. Blasi C., Carranza M., Frondoni R., Rosati L. 2000 – Ecosystem classification and mapping: a proposal for italian landscape – Appl. Veg. Sci. 3: 233–242.
  • 7. Blasi C., Di Pietro R., Filesi L. 2004 – Syntaxonomical revision of Quercetalia pubescenti-petraeae in the Italian Peninsula – Fitosociologia, 41: 87–164.
  • 8. Borhidi A. 1995 – Social behaviour types, the naturalness and relative ecological indicator values of the higher plants in the Hungarian flora – Acta Bot. Hung. 39: 97–181.
  • 9. Bormann F.H., Likens G.E. 1979 – Pattern and Process in Forested Ecosystem – Springer–Verlag, New York, 253 pp.
  • 10. Burnett M.R., August P.V., Brown J.H., Killingbeck K.T. 1998 – The influence of geomorphological heterogeneity on biodiversity. I-A patch-scale perspective – Conserv. Biol. 12: 363–370.
  • 11. Campetella G., Canullo R., Bartha S. 2004 – Coenostate descriptors and spatial dependence in vegetation: Derived variables in monitoring forest dynamics and assembly rules – Community Ecol. 5: 105–114.
  • 12. Catorci A., Orsomando E. 2001 – Note illustrative della Carta della Vegetazione del Foglio Nocera Umbra (N. 312 – Carta d’Italia I.G.M. – 1:50.000) – Braun-Blanquetia, 23: 1–129.
  • 13. Catorci A., Orsomando E., Raponi M. 2003 – Aspetti corologici e fitosociologici di Carpinus orientalis Miller in Umbria – Fitosociologia, 40: 39–48.
  • 14. Catorci A., Biondi E., Casavecchia S., Pesaresi S., Vitanzi A., Foglia M., Galassi S., Pinzi M., Angelini E., Bianchelli M., Ventrone F., Cesaretti S., Gatti R. 2007 – La Carta della vegetazione e degli elementi di paesaggio vegetale delle Marche (scala 1:50.000) per la progettazione e la gestione della rete ecologica regionale – Fitosociologia, 44 suppl. 1: 115–118.
  • 15. Chytrý M., Exner A., Hrivnák R., Ujházy K., Valachovič M., Willner W. 2002 – Context dependence of diagnostic species: A case study of the Central European spruce forests – Folia Geobot. 37: 403–417.
  • 16. Conti F., Abbate G., Alessandrini A., Blasi C. 2005 – An Annotated Checklist of the Italian Vascular Flora – Palombi Editore, Roma, 420 pp.
  • 17. Debussche M., Debussche G., Lepart J. 2001 – Changes in vegetation of Quercus pubescens woodland after cessation of coppicing and grazing – J. Veg. Sci. 12: 81–92.
  • 18. Decocq G. 2000 – The “masking effect” of silviculture on substrate-induced plant diversity in oak-hornbeam forests from northern France – Biodiv. and Conserv. 9: 1467–1491.
  • 19. Decocq G. 2003 – Phytosociologie, sindinamique et archeologie du paysage – Contr. Bot. 38: 13–23.
  • 20. Decocq G., Hermy M. 2003 – Are there herbaceous dryads in temperate deciduous forest? – Acta Botanica Gallica, 150: 373–382.
  • 21. Decocq G., Aubert M., Dupont F., Alard D., Saguez R., Wattez-Franger A., De Foucault B., Delelis-Dusollier A., Bardat J. 2004 – Plant diversity in a managed temperate deciduous forest: understorey response to two silvicultural systems – J. Appl. Ecol. 41: 1065–1079.
  • 22. Denslow J.S. 1980 – Patterns of plant species diversity during succession under different disturbance regimes – Oecologia, 46: 18–21.
  • 23. Denslow J.S. 1987 – Tropical rain forest gaps and tree species diversity – Annu. rev. ecol. syst. 18: 431–451.
  • 24. Franklin J.F. 1982 – Old-growth forests in the Pacific North-west; an ecological view, Oldgrowth Forests: a balance perspective. University of Oregon, Bureau of Governmental Research and Service, Eugene, OR, USA: 5–27.
  • 25. Giller J. 1984 – Community Structure and Niche. Chapman & Hall, London.
  • 26. Grime J.P. 1979 – Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes. Wiley, Chichester.
  • 27. Grime J.P. 2001 – Plant Strategies, Vegetation Processes and Ecosystem Properties. 2nd ed – Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester.
  • 28. Grubb P.J. 1977 – The maintenance of species richness in plant communities: the importance of the regeneration niche – Biol. Rev. 52: 107–145.
  • 29. Hérault B., Honnay O., Toern D. 2005 – Evaluation of the ecological restoration potential of plant communities in Norway spruce plantations using life-trait based approach – J. Appl. Ecol. 42: 536–545.
  • 30. Hermy M., Honnay O., Firbank L., Grashof-Bokdam C., Lawesson J.E. 1999 – An ecological comparison between ancient and other forest plant species of Europe, and the implications for forest conservation – Biol. Conserv. 91: 9–22.
  • 31. Howard L.F., Lee T.D. 2003 – Temporal patterns of vascular plant diversity in southeastern New Hampshire forests – Forest Ecol. Manag. 185: 5–20.
  • 32. Huston M. 1979 – A general hypothesis of species diversity – Amer. Nat. 104: 501–528.
  • 33. Kirby K.J. 1990 – Changes in the ground flora of a broadleaved wood within a clear fell, group fells and a coppice block – Forestry, 63: 241–249.
  • 34. Kirby K.J., Thomas R.C. 2000 – Changes in the ground flora in Wytham Woods, southern England from 1974 to 1991 – Implications for nature conservation – J. Veg. Sci. 11: 871–880.
  • 35. Kolasa J., Rollo C.D. 1991 – Introduction: the heterogeneity of heterogeneity, a glossary (In: Ecological Heterogeneity, Eds: J. Kolasa, S.T.A. Pickett) – Springer, New-York: 1–23.
  • 36. Kuželová I., Chytrý M. 2004 – Interspecific associations in phytosociological data sets: how do they change between local and regional scale? – Plant Ecol. 173: 247–257.
  • 37. Mason C.F., Macdonald S.M. 2002 – Responses of ground flora to coppice management in an English woodland. A study using permanent quadrats – Biodiv. Conserv. 11: 1773–1789.
  • 38. McCune B., Mefford M.J. 2006 – PC-ORD. Multivariate Analysis of Ecological Data. Version 5 – MjM Software Design. Gleneden Beach, Oregon.
  • 39. Metzger F., Schultz J. 1984 – Understory response to 50 years of management of northern hardwood forest in Upper Michigan – Am. Midl. Nat. 112: 209–223.
  • 40. Nagaike T., Kamitani T., Nakashizuka T. 2003 – Plant species diversity in abandoned coppice forests in a temperate deciduous forest area of central Japan – Plant Ecol. 166: 145–156.
  • 41. Nash Suding K. 2001 – The effects of gap creation on competitive interactions: separating changes in overall intensity from relative rankings – Oikos, 94: 219–227.
  • 42. Noss R .F. 1990 – Indicators for monitoring biodiversity: a hierarchical approach – Conserv. Biol. 4: 355–364.
  • 43. Orsomando E., Catorci A. 2000 – The phytoclimate of Umbria – Parlatorea, 6: 5–24.
  • 44. Palmer M.W. 1994 – Variation in species richness: toward an unification of hypotheses – Folia Geobot. Physiotax. 29: 511–530.
  • 45. Pausas J.G., Carreras J. 1995 – The effect of bedrock type, temperature and moisture on species richness in Pyrenean Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forests – Vegetatio, 116: 85–92.
  • 46. Peet P.K., Christensen N.L. 1988 – Changes in species diversity during secondary forest succession on the North Carolina Piedmont. (In: Diversity and Pattern in Plant Communities, Eds: H.J. During, M.J.A. Werger, J.H. Willems) – SPB. Academic Publishing, The Hague: 233–245.
  • 47. Pesaresi S., Biondi E., Catorci A, Casavecchia S., Foglia M. 2007 – Il Geodatabase del Sistema Informativo Vegetazionale delle Marche – Fitosociologia, 44 suppl. 1: 95–101.
  • 48. Peterken G.F. 1974 – A method of assessing woodland flora for conservation using indicator species – Biol. Conserv. 6: 239–245.
  • 49. Picket S.T.A., White P.S. 1985 – Natural Disturbance and Patch Dynamics – Academic Press, London.
  • 50. Pignatti S. 2005 – Valori di bioindicazione delle piante vascolari della Flora d’Italia – Braun-Blanquetia, 39: 3-97 (in Italian).
  • 51. Piskernik M. 1985 – Klimaks na Tržaškem krasu je bukov gozd (Climax on the Trieste karst is a beech forest) – Gozd. Vestn. 43: 242–245 (in Czech).
  • 52. Putman R.J. 1994 – Community Ecology – Chapman and Hall, London.
  • 53. Rackham O. 1980 – Ancient Woodland, its History, Vegetation and Uses in England. Arnold – London.
  • 54. Rice B., Westoby M. 1983 – Plant species richness at the 0.1 ha scale in Australian vegetation compared to other continents – Vegetatio, 52: 129–140.
  • 55. Rivas-Martínez S., Rivas-Saenz S. 1996–2009 – Worldwide Bioclimatic Classification System, Phytosociological Research Center, Spain. http://www.globalbioclimatics.org.
  • 56. Roberts M.K., Gilliam F.S. 1995 – Patterns and mechanisms of plant diversity in forested ecosystems: Implication for forest management – Ecol. Appl. 5: 969–977.
  • 57. Scheiner S.M. 1992 – Measuring pattern diversity – Ecology, 73: 1860–1867.
  • 58. Šercelj A. 1996 – Začetki in razvoj gozdov v Sloveniji (Origin and evolution of forests in Slovenia) – Slov. Akad. Znan. Umetn. Razr. nar. Vede Dela (Opera) 35: 1–142 (in Slovenian).
  • 59. SPSS Inc. 1997 – SPSS for Windows. Version 8.0 – Chicago, Illinois, NJ, USA.
  • 60. Stone W.E., Wolfe M.L. 1996 – Response of understory vegetation to variable mortality following a mountain pine beetle epidemic in lodgepole pine stands in northern Utah – Vegetatio, 122: 1–12.
  • 61. Tilman D. 1984 – Plant dominance along an experimental nutrient gradient – Ecology, 65: 1445–1453.
  • 62. Tilman D., Knops J., Wedin D, Reich P., Ritchie M., Siemann E. 1997 – The influence of functional diversity and composition on ecosystem process – Science, 277: 1300–1302.
  • 63. Tilman D., Pacala S.W. 1993 – The maintenance of species richness in plant communities (In: Species Diversity in Ecological Communities: Historical and Geographical Perspectives, Eds: R.E. Ricklefs, D. Schluter) – University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 13–25.
  • 64. van der Maarel E. 1993 – Some remarks on disturbance and its relations to diversity
  • 65. van der Warf S. 1991 – The influence of coppicing on vegetation – Vegetatio, 92: 97–110.
  • 66. Vitanzi A., Paura B., Catorci A. 2009 – Forest syntaxa distribution hierarchical modelling: preliminary assessment of a Central Apennine (Italy) landscape. 32nd Symposium of the Eastern Alpine and Dinaric society for Vegetation science in Pörtschach – Austria – Sauteria, 18: 311–322.
  • 67. Wang X., Hao Z., Ye J., Zhang J., Li B., Yao X. 2008 – Spatial variation of species diversity across scales in an old-growth temperate forest of China – Ecol. Res. 23: 709–717.
  • 68. Wilson S.D., Tilman D. 1993 – Plant competition and resource availability in response to disturbance and fertilization – Ecology, 74: 599–612.
  • 69. Whitney G.G., Foster D.R. 1988 – Overstorey composition and age as determinants of the understorey flora of woods of Central New England – J. Ecol. 76: 867–876.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BGPK-3304-2844
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.