Shrub Communities (shrub + community)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Assessing impacts of large herbivores on shrubs: tests of scaling factors for utilization rates from shoot-level measurements

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
DANIELLE M. BILYEU
Summary 1Accurate methods for estimating the intensity of browsing by herbivores are fundamental to understanding the ecology of shrub communities. Quantifying browse utilization on shrubs at large scales is difficult because shrubs have complex, spatially variable growth forms. Most existing methods estimate browsing rate at the scale of linear current-year shoots or twigs. How such fine-scale estimates relate to the proportion of current-year growth consumed from whole plants or plots is often unknown. The relationship is likely to be complex because herbivores selectively browse more productive plants and plant parts. 2Using a clipping experiment designed to mimic elk Cervus elaphus browsing, we quantified how utilization estimates at the scale of individual current-year shoots of two willow species, Salix bebbiana and Salix geyeriana, relate to actual mass removed at the scale of rooted stems. Three approaches to scaling were examined: (i) taking an average, (ii) multiplying by the proportion of shoots clipped and (iii) multiplying by a novel scaling factor that weights utilization by productivity. To address how to scale-up from stems to plots, we applied the most accurate stem-level method to elk-browsed willow and compared plot-level estimates by two scaling approaches. 3In scaling from shoots to stems, the novel scaling factor was most successful and resulted in accurate estimates for up to c. 45% of current annual growth clipped. In scaling from the stem to the plot, elk preference for more productive stems caused a simple average of stem-level utilization to differ from a productivity-weighted average by 15%. 4Synthesis and applications. In order to reflect accurately the proportion of biomass consumed at a whole-plant level, fine-scale estimates of utilization should be weighted by an estimate of pre-browse productivity, as this is mathematically equivalent to summing pre-browse and post-browse mass before calculating the proportion consumed. In developing methods to estimate utilization at plot scales, an important consideration is the choice of sampling unit, which should be both amenable to unbiased sampling and tractable in terms of measuring productivity. [source]


The distribution of heath balds in the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 4 2001
Peter S. White
White (1982). Abstract. We used remote sensing and a geographic information system to model the distribution of evergreen shrub communities, called ,heath balds', in the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee, USA. The 421 heath balds averaged 1.8 ha in size and covered 0.3% of the landscape. They reached their greatest importance on upper slopes (92% had relative slope positions > 80), convex topography (82% occurred on sites with a curvature greater than 2.6), and elevations between 1100 and 1600 m (94% of the balds). Although heath balds were found in old-growth watersheds, the two watersheds with the greatest number of balds burned extensively after logging in the early 1900s. Bald occurrence was positively correlated with burned sites, old growth condition, and a highly acidic rock type. Heath balds showed a striking geographic pattern, with 88.1% of the area of this community found in six watersheds comprising only 35.4% of the study area. Despite similar topography, geology, and history, the eleven other watersheds had only 11.9% of the bald area while comprising 64.4% of the study area. Multivariate models showed that this community occurs on only 0.4 to 9.0% of the seemingly appropriate sites. Once established, this shrub community, with its dense evergreen canopy and thick leaf litter, is resistant to tree invasion. Both forest and shrub communities are stable on sites that are seemingly ideal for heath bald occurrence. [source]


The impact of changing olive cultivation practices on the ground flora of olive groves in the Messara and Psiloritis regions, Crete, Greece

LAND DEGRADATION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 3 2006
H. D. Allen
Abstract This paper examines the impact that different olive cultivation practices have on the nature of the ground flora of olive groves in the region of the Psiloritis massif and Messara Plain in central and southern Crete, Greece. In lower, flatter areas there are areas of both traditional and intensive forms of olive cultivation. In more marginal, upland areas there are traditional terraced olive groves, some of which are being abandoned. The relationship between the vegetation composition of the ground flora and environmental variables was established, by means of TWINSPAN® and ordination analysis, using survey data from nineteen sites across the region. Four vegetation communities are identified: olive with herbaceous taxa; olive with sclerophyllous shrub taxa; and two forms of sclerophyllous shrub communities. Ordination results indicate that environmental variables, such as soil characteristics, slope aspect and slope angle, explain about 60,per,cent of the species,environment relationships. The remaining variation in species composition is interpreted to be the result of different cultivation practices. The implications for land degradation are examined, in particular the changes in vegetation diversity of both intensive and semi-abandoned olive groves, the potential for increased soil erosion, and the risk of fire as a result of increased fuel loading as flammable shrubs invade abandoned terraces. Intensification of olive cultivation in Crete, and across the Mediterranean, has been encouraged by subsidies from the European Union leading to rapid landscape change. Thus there is a need to monitor changes in olive cultivation practices both at the local scale, by means of ground-based fieldwork, and at landscape and regional scales, by means of remote sensing. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Comparative community physiology: nonconvergence in water relations among three semi-arid shrub communities

NEW PHYTOLOGIST, Issue 1 2008
Anna L. Jacobsen
Summary ,,Plant adaptations to the environment are limited, and therefore plants in similar environments may display similar functional and physiological traits, a pattern termed functional convergence. Evidence was examined for functional convergence among 28 evergreen woody shrubs from three plant communities of the semi-arid winter rainfall region of southern California. ,,Both leaf and water relations traits were examined, including seasonal stomatal conductance (gs), specific leaf area (SLA), leaf specific conductivity (Kl), seasonal water potential (,w), stem cavitation resistance (,50), and xylem density. ,,Species display community-specific suites of xylem and leaf traits consistent with different patterns of water use among communities, with coastal sage scrub species utilizing shallow pulses of water, Mojave Desert scrub species relying on deeper water reserves, and chaparral species utilizing both shallow and deep moisture reserves. Communities displayed similar degrees of water stress, with a community-level minimum ,w (,wmin) of c. ,4.6 Mpa, similar to other arid communities. Pooled across sites, there was a strong correlation between ,wmin and xylem density, suggesting that these traits are broadly related and predictive of one another. ,This comparative community physiology approach may be useful in testing hypotheses of functional convergence across structurally similar semi-arid communities. [source]


Effects of permafrost degradation on woody vegetation at arctic treeline on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska

PERMAFROST AND PERIGLACIAL PROCESSES, Issue 2 2003
Andrea H. Lloyd
Abstract Permafrost degradation leads to substantial changes in soil thermal and hydrologic characteristics. We investigated the effects of changes in active layer thickness and soil drainage on vegetation distribution near the arctic treeline on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska. We measured active layer thickness, soil moisture, density of tall shrub species, cover of low shrub species, and reconstructed white spruce establishment history along transects across the banks of a network of thaw ponds. We found that active layer thickness did not vary along our transects, but soils on thaw pond banks were significantly drier than those on level tundra or in thaw-pond channels. Thaw-pond banks were the only sites in which trees successfully established, and shrub communities on thaw-pond banks were taller and more dominated by tall shrub species like willow and shrub birch. The data suggest that the establishment of tree and tall shrub species at the arctic treeline can be limited by the availability of well-drained microsites, and the response of these species to regional climatic changes will be constrained by the availability of such microsites and thus contingent upon further degradation of the permafrost. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Extending point pattern analysis for objects of finite size and irregular shape

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2006
THORSTEN WIEGAND
Summary 1We use a grid- and simulation-based approach to extend point pattern analysis to deal with plants of finite size and irregular shape, and compare the results of our approach with that of the conventional point approximation. The plants are approximated by using an underlying grid and may occupy several adjacent grid cells depending on their size and shape. Null models correspond to that of point pattern analysis but need to be modified to account for the finite size and irregular shape of plants. 2We use a mapped area of a grass-shrub steppe in semi-arid Patagonia, Argentina, to show that the shrub community is essentially randomly structured, but that shrubs facilitate grasses in their immediate neighbourhood. 3The occurrence of this random spatial structure provides important new information on the biology of shrub populations. In general, previous data from semi-arid and arid ecosystems have shown that adult shrubs tend to show over-dispersed patterns, whereas juveniles are clumped. 4We find that the point approximation may produce misleading results (i) if plant size varies greatly, (ii) if the scale of interest is of the same order of magnitude as the size of the plants, and (iii) if the plants of a given pattern are constrained through competition for space by the presence of other plants. The point approximation worked well in all other cases, but usually depicted weaker significant effects than when the size and shape of plants were taken into account. 5Our approach to quantifying small-scale spatial patterns in plant communities has broad applications, including the study of facilitation and competition. Ecologists will be able to use the software available to take advantage of these methods. [source]


Shrub vegetation on tropical granitic inselbergs in French Guiana

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 5 2003
Corinne Sarthou
Boggan et al. (1997) Abstract. In French Guiana, inselbergs in the form of granite outcrops rise abruptly from the surrounding rain forest. They constitute isolated islands of a special type of vegetation restricted to this peculiar substrate. Shrub granitic vegetation, organized in thickets on open exposed rocks of inselbergs, are described using the Braun-Blanquet method combined with Correspondence Analysis. This phytosociological study revealed only one particular shrub community on each inselberg, including predominantly evergreen and sclerophyllous shrubs, especially microphanerophytes, belonging to the Clusiaceae, Myrtaceae and Bombacaceae. These outcrop communities exhibit species endemic to the Guianas region and also species rare in French Guiana. Affinities with flora of other inselbergs and vegetation types in South America are examined and discussed. Reasons for observed floristic and structural changes in each community are also discussed. [source]


The distribution of heath balds in the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 4 2001
Peter S. White
White (1982). Abstract. We used remote sensing and a geographic information system to model the distribution of evergreen shrub communities, called ,heath balds', in the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee, USA. The 421 heath balds averaged 1.8 ha in size and covered 0.3% of the landscape. They reached their greatest importance on upper slopes (92% had relative slope positions > 80), convex topography (82% occurred on sites with a curvature greater than 2.6), and elevations between 1100 and 1600 m (94% of the balds). Although heath balds were found in old-growth watersheds, the two watersheds with the greatest number of balds burned extensively after logging in the early 1900s. Bald occurrence was positively correlated with burned sites, old growth condition, and a highly acidic rock type. Heath balds showed a striking geographic pattern, with 88.1% of the area of this community found in six watersheds comprising only 35.4% of the study area. Despite similar topography, geology, and history, the eleven other watersheds had only 11.9% of the bald area while comprising 64.4% of the study area. Multivariate models showed that this community occurs on only 0.4 to 9.0% of the seemingly appropriate sites. Once established, this shrub community, with its dense evergreen canopy and thick leaf litter, is resistant to tree invasion. Both forest and shrub communities are stable on sites that are seemingly ideal for heath bald occurrence. [source]