| Literature DB >> 27547531 |
Thomas K Lameris1, Joseph R Bennett2, Louise K Blight3, Marissa Giesen4, Michael H Janssen5, Joop J H J Schaminée6, Peter Arcese7.
Abstract
We used 116 years of floral and faunal records from Mandarte Island, British Columbia, Canada, to estimate the indirect effects of humans on plant communities via their effects on the population size of a surface-nesting, colonial seabird, the Glaucous-winged gull (Larus glaucescens). Comparing current to historical records revealed 18 extirpations of native plant species (32% of species historically present), 31 exotic species introductions, and one case of exotic introduction followed by extirpation. Contemporary surveys indicated that native species cover declined dramatically from 1986 to 2006, coincident with the extirpation of 'old-growth' conifers. Because vegetation change co-occurred with an increasing gull population locally and regionally, we tested several predictions from the hypothesis that the presence and activities of seabirds help to explain those changes. Specifically, we predicted that on Mandarte and nearby islands with gull colonies, we should observe higher nutrient loading and exotic plant species richness and cover than on nearby islands without gull colonies, as a consequence of competitive dominance in species adapted to high soil nitrogen and trampling. As predicted, we found that native plant species cover and richness were lower, and exotic species cover and richness higher, on islands with versus without gull colonies. In addition, we found that soil carbon and nitrogen on islands with nesting gulls were positively related to soil depth and exotic species richness and cover across plots and islands. Our results support earlier suggestions that nesting seabirds can drive rapid change in insular plant communities by increasing nutrients and disturbing vegetation, and that human activities that affect seabird abundance may therefore indirectly affect plant community composition on islands with seabird colonies.Entities:
Keywords: Exotic species invasion; Garry oak ecosystem; Islands; Maritime meadow; Native species extirpation; Plant communities; Seabirds; Soil nutrients
Year: 2016 PMID: 27547531 PMCID: PMC4963222 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Comparison of photographs of central woodland on Mandarte Island (1963–2002).
(A) Historical photograph from 1963 (by Peter Grant; Smith et al., 2006) and (B) a recent reproduction made in 2002 (by Peter Arcese). Note mature Arbutus menziesii and Pseudotsuga menziesii in the historical photograph. The latter include 3 individuals 0.8–1.4 m in basal diameter, and estimated at 250–400 years-old by comparison to newly harvested trees on adjacent islands.
Figure 2Native and exotic species cover and richness on islands with and without gull colonies.
Box-plots showing differences in (A) species cover and (B) species richness of exotic and native species, on islands with gull colonies (white columns) and without (grey columns). Asterisks denote significant differences in Wilcoxon tests (double: p < 0.01; triple: p < 0.001).
Significant coefficients from several generalized mixed models relating vegetation composition and environmental variables.
| Response variable | Predictor variables | Coefficients | Coefficient value | Standard error | t | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proportion exotic cover | N, C, S, B | B | 0.449 | 0.162 | 2.776 | 0.007 |
| Exotic cover | N, C, S, B | B | 0.541 | 0.123 | 4.417 | < 0.001 |
| Proportion exotic richness | N, C, S, B | C, N | −0.021, −0.222 | 0.007, −0.092 | −2.964, −2.416 | 0.004, −0.018 |
| Exotic richness | N, C, S, B | C | −0.008 | 0.003 | −2.762 | 0.007 |
| Native cover | N, C, S, B | C | 0.008 | 0.003 | 2.225 | 0.029 |
| Native richness | N, C, S, B | B | −0.496 | 0.056 | −8.884 | < 0.001 |
Notes:
Response variables:
Transformed using arcsine square root.
Transformed using log (+1).
Predictor variables: N, total nitrogen concentration; C, total carbon concentration; S, log mean soil depth; B, presence of gull colonies on island (with or without gull colonies).