Literature DB >> 19508676

Paying the extinction debt in southern Wisconsin forest understories.

David A Rogers1, Thomas P Rooney, Todd J Hawbaker, Volker C Radeloff, Donald M Waller.   

Abstract

The lack of long-term baseline data restricts the ability to measure changes in biological diversity directly and to determine its cause. This hampers conservation efforts and limits testing of basic tenets of ecology and conservation biology. We used a historical baseline survey to track shifts in the abundance and distribution of 296 native understory species across 82 sites over 55 years in the fragmented forests of southern Wisconsin. We resurveyed stands first surveyed in the early 1950s to evaluate the influence of patch size and surrounding land cover on shifts in native plant richness and heterogeneity and to evaluate changes in the relative importance of local site conditions versus the surrounding landscape context as drivers of community composition and structure. Larger forests and those with more surrounding forest cover lost fewer species, were more likely to recruit new species, and had lower rates of homogenization than smaller forests in more fragmented landscapes. Nearby urbanization further reduced both alpha and beta understory diversity. Similarly, understory composition depended strongly on local site conditions in the original survey but only weakly reflected the surrounding landscape composition. By 2005, however, the relative importance of these factors had reversed such that the surrounding landscape structure is now a much better predictor of understory composition than are local site conditions. Collectively, these results strongly support the idea that larger intact habitat patches and landscapes better sustain native species diversity and demonstrate that humans play an increasingly important role in driving patterns of native species diversity and community composition.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19508676     DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01256.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  10 in total

1.  Historical agriculture alters the effects of fire on understory plant beta diversity.

Authors:  W Brett Mattingly; John L Orrock; Cathy D Collins; Lars A Brudvig; Ellen I Damschen; Joseph W Veldman; Joan L Walker
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2014-11-20       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Using plant traits to predict the sensitivity of colonizations and extirpations to landscape context.

Authors:  Jenny L McCune; Mark Vellend
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2015-01-23       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  Habitat fragmentation, tree diversity, and plant invasion interact to structure forest caterpillar communities.

Authors:  John O Stireman; Hilary Devlin; Annie L Doyle
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 3.225

4.  New reports of nuclear DNA content for 407 vascular plant taxa from the United States.

Authors:  Chengke Bai; William S Alverson; Aaron Follansbee; Donald M Waller
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2012-10-24       Impact factor: 4.357

5.  Long-term regional shifts in plant community composition are largely explained by local deer impact experiments.

Authors:  Katie Frerker; Autumn Sabo; Donald Waller
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-12-31       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  The pace of plant community change is accelerating in remnant prairies.

Authors:  Amy O Alstad; Ellen I Damschen; Thomas J Givnish; John A Harrington; Mark K Leach; David A Rogers; Donald M Waller
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2016-02-19       Impact factor: 14.136

7.  Assessing plant community composition fails to capture impacts of white-tailed deer on native and invasive plant species.

Authors:  Victoria Nuzzo; Andrea Dávalos; Bernd Blossey
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2017-06-08       Impact factor: 3.276

8.  Sixty years of community change in the prairie-savanna-forest mosaic of Wisconsin.

Authors:  Laura M Ladwig; Ellen I Damschen; David A Rogers
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-07-28       Impact factor: 2.912

9.  Unprecedented plant species loss after a decade in fragmented subtropical Chaco Serrano forests.

Authors:  Ramiro Aguilar; Ana Calviño; Lorena Ashworth; Natalia Aguirre-Acosta; Lucas Manuel Carbone; Guillermo Albrieu-Llinás; Miguel Nolasco; Adrián Ghilardi; Luciano Cagnolo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-11-28       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The paradox of long-term ungulate impact: increase of plant species richness in a temperate forest.

Authors:  Ondřej Vild; Radim Hédl; Martin Kopecký; Péter Szabó; Silvie Suchánková; Václav Zouhar
Journal:  Appl Veg Sci       Date:  2017-02-08       Impact factor: 3.252

  10 in total

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