Tree recruitment pulses and long-term species coexistence in mixed forests of western Québec

Ecoscience ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathieu Bouchard ◽  
Daniel Kneeshaw ◽  
Yves Bergeron
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Peter D. McIntosh ◽  
James L. Hardcastle ◽  
Tobias Klöffel ◽  
Martin Moroni ◽  
Talitha C. Santini

Small areas of the wetter parts of southeast Australia including Tasmania support high-biomass “wet” eucalypt forests, including “mixed” forests consisting of mature eucalypts up to 100 m high with a rainforest understorey. In Tasmania, mixed forests transition to lower biomass rainforests over time. In the scientific and public debate on ways to mitigate climate change, these forests have received attention for their ability to store large amounts of carbon (C), but the contribution of soil C stocks to the total C in these two ecosystems has not been systematically researched, and consequently, the potential of wet eucalypt forests to serve as long-term C sinks is uncertain. This study compared soil C stocks to 1 m depth at paired sites under rainforest and mixed forests and found that there was no detectable difference of mean total soil C between the two forest types, and on average, both contained about 200 Mg·ha−1 of C. Some C in subsoil under rainforests is 3000 years old and retains a chemical signature of pyrogenic C, detectable in NMR spectra, indicating that soil C stocks are buffered against the effects of forest succession. The mean loss of C in biomass as mixed forests transition to rainforests is estimated to be about 260 Mg·ha−1 over a c. 400-year period, so the mature mixed forest ecosystem emits about 0.65 Mg·ha−1·yr−1 of C during its transition to rainforest. For this reason and because of the risk of forest fires, setting aside large areas of wet eucalypt forests as reserves in order to increase landscape C storage is not a sound strategy for long-term climate change mitigation. Maintaining a mosaic of managed native forests, including regenerating eucalypts, mixed forests, rainforests, and reserves, is likely to be the best strategy for maintaining landscape C stocks.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Blackford ◽  
Rachel M. Germain ◽  
Benjamin Gilbert

AbstractEcological theory produces opposing predictions about whether differences in the timing of life history transitions, or ‘phenology’, promote or limit coexistence. Phenological separation is predicted to create temporal niche differences, increasing coexistence, yet phenological separation may competitively favour one species, increasing fitness differences and hindering coexistence. We experimentally manipulated relative germination timing, a critical phenological event, of two annual grass species,Vulpia microstachysandV. octoflora, to test these contrasting predictions. We parameterized a competition model to estimate within-season niche differences, fitness differences, and coexistence, and to estimate coexistence when among-year fluctuations of germination timing occur. Increasing germination separation caused parallel changes in niche and fitness differences, with the net effect of weakening within-year coexistence. Both species experienced a competitive advantage by germinating earlier, strongly enough to allow the generally inferior competitor to exclude the other with at least a four day head start. The overall consequence of germination separation was to limit coexistence within a given year, although among-year variation in relative timing of germination was sufficient to support long-term coexistence. Our results clarify how phenological differences structure competitive interactions, and highlight the need to quantify among-year variation in these differences to better understand species coexistence.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxime Dubart ◽  
Patrice David ◽  
Frida Ben-Ami ◽  
Christoph R. Haag ◽  
V. Ilmari Pajunen ◽  
...  

AbstractNiche partitioning is the most studied factor structuring communities of competing species. In fragmented landscapes, however, a paradox can exist: different taxa may competitively dominate different types of habitat patches, resulting in a form of spatial niche partitioning, yet differences in long-term distributions among species can appear surprisingly small. This paradox is illustrated by an emblematic metacommunity - that of Daphnia spp. in rockpools on the Finnish Baltic coast, where three species compete with each other, have distinct ecological preferences, yet largely overlap in long-term distributions. Here we examine how metacommunity models that explicitly estimate species-specific demographic parameters can solve the apparent paradox. Our research confirms previous studies that local extinction rates are influenced by environmental variables in a strong and species-specific way and are considerably increased by interspecific competition. Yet, our simulations show that this situation exists alongside interspecific differences in realized niches that are, overall, small, and identified three main explanations for this compatibility. Our results illustrate how state-space modelling can clarify complex metacommunity dynamics and explain why local competition and niche differentiation do not always scale up to the landscape level.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Julia Pereira ◽  
Maité Masciocchi ◽  
Juan Carlos Corley

Abstract In Patagonia (Argentina) two non-native vespid wasps became established in the last decades. Vespula germanica was first detected in 1980 while V. vulgaris arrived some 30 years later. Both species can have a strong negative impact on agriculture, natural environment and on outdoor human activities. Invasion success -the establishment and spread of a species- may be influenced negatively by the degree of interaction with the resident native community, and alien species already present. The sequential arrival of these two wasps allows us to understand key questions of invasion ecology. Additionally, recognizing the outcome of the invasion by vespids in Patagonia -a region lacking native social wasps-, may help plan species-focused mitigation and control strategies. We explored long term species coexistence through the deterministic Lotka-Volterra competition model, using site-specific field data on prey captured (to estimate niche overlap) and current nest densities in sites. Food items carried by workers were similar but there is some degree of segregation. V. germanica nest density in shared sites, and in sites without coexistence, were 3.14 and 3.5 respectively, being higher for V. vulgaris with 4.71 and 5.33. The model predicts stable co-existence of both species in the invaded range, yet a higher abundance of V. vulgaris should be expected. Added to evidence on other foraging behavioral attributes of both wasp species and the invasion patterns observed in other regions, it is likely that the prior presence of V. germanica does not contribute significantly to the biotic resistance of the invaded range for V. vulgaris


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 20180493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashwin Viswanathan ◽  
Jaboury Ghazoul ◽  
Ganesh Honwad ◽  
N. Arun Kumar ◽  
Robert Bagchi

Pathogenic interactions between fungi and plants facilitate plant species coexistence and tropical rainforest diversity. Such interactions, however, may be affected by forest fragmentation as fungi are susceptible to anthropogenic disturbance. To examine how fragmentation affects fungus-induced seed and seedling mortality, we sowed seeds of six plant species in soils collected from 21 forest fragments. We compared seedling establishment in unmanipulated soils to soils treated with fungicides. Fungicides increased germination of Toona ciliata seeds and decreased mortality of Syzygium rubicundum and Olea dioica seedlings. The fungus-induced mortality of one of these species, S. rubicundum , decreased with decreasing fragment size, indicating that its interactions with pathogenic fungi may weaken as fragments become smaller. We provide evidence that a potential diversity-maintaining plant–fungus interaction weakens in small forest fragments and suggest that such disruptions may have important long-term consequences for plant diversity. However, we emphasize the need for further research across rainforest plant communities to better understand the future of diversity in fragmented rainforest landscapes.


Author(s):  
Daniel Padfield ◽  
Meaghan Castledine ◽  
Joseph Pennycook ◽  
Elze Hesse ◽  
Angus Buckling

AbstractThe ability of species to mutually invade from rare is the defining measure of species coexistence. However, it is unknown whether invasion growth rates predict any characteristic of long-term community dynamics. Here, we use a model five-species microbial community to investigate the link between short-term growth rate and long-term relative abundance. We manipulated diversity and tested the ability of species to coexist in different combinations. Across all diversity levels and species combinations, populations re-established from rare in 71 of 75 combinations and all combinations were stable in long-term culture. Moreover, short-term relative invader growth rate was positively associated with long-term equilibrium proportion, despite large variation in interactions between species and communities. This finding was confirmed using a modelling approach and suggests that the short-term invasion growth rate can predict long-term relative abundance within that community.


2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (11) ◽  
pp. 1577-1586 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michal Bosela ◽  
Brian Tobin ◽  
Vladimír Šebeň ◽  
Rudolf Petráš ◽  
Guy R. Larocque

The influence of forest ecology and strategic planning has increased in importance to support the management of mixed-species forests to enhance biodiversity. However, little is known about competitive and facilitative interactions between trees and species in mixed fir–beech–spruce forests, mostly because of a lack of long-term experimental research. In the 1960s, long-term sample plots were established in the Western Carpathians to develop region-specific yield models. Trees in the plots were measured at 5- to 16-year intervals from 1967(69). In 2010, the positions of standing trees in all plots were identified spatially. Stump positions were also identified to record the coordinates of trees that had been removed or had died. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the applicability of widely used competition indices for mature fir–beech–spruce mixed forests and to test whether the tree competition zone changes among species and forest stands of different stocking densities. Results showed that the best competition index was based on the comparison of the basal area of competitors and the subject tree in the radius, which was defined as a function of stand density and species. In addition, beech was found to be a strong self-competitor, which was not the case for silver fir (Abies alba Mill.). Results suggest that simpler competition indices are better suited for such diverse forests, as more complex indices do not describe the competition interactions sufficiently well.


2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 626-636
Author(s):  
Chenchen Shen ◽  
Andrew S Nelson ◽  
Terrie B Jain ◽  
Meghan B Foard ◽  
Russell T Graham

Abstract A thinning study was established in 1967 in moist mixed forests on the Priest River Experimental Forest in northern Idaho, USA. The study design included three thinning intensities: low, moderate, and high intensity (1,976, 988, and 494 trees ha–1). This study examined short-term (11 years) and long-term (50 years) thinning effects on residual stand characteristics, growth, and yield. Since regeneration may occur after thinning, understory change was also addressed. Thinning decreased stand density immediately but improved the growth of residual trees. Shade-tolerant species were favored in all the thinnings and dominated 50 years after thinning. Unthinned stands had higher total and merchantable volume than all thinned stands both 11 years and 50 years post treatment. Regeneration and nontree vegetation richness increased shortly after thinning, whereas nontree vegetation cover decreased sharply 50 years after treatment. The stands developed into multistrata forests with shade-tolerant species in both the overstory and understory. This is contrary to current thinning practice favoring shade-intolerant species, but demonstrates the resilience of moist Northern Rockies forests to partial overstory disturbances. In this study, thinning favoring shade-tolerant species in these mixed forests has a more significant effect on forest structure dynamics than timber production.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document