3,441 results on '"heathlands"'
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2. Cross-landscape fuel moisture differences impact simulated fire behaviour.
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Little, K., Kettridge, N., Belcher, C. M., Graham, L. J., Stoof, C. R., Ivison, K., and Cardil, A.
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FIRE management ,MOISTURE ,HEATHER ,MOISTURE measurement ,SPRING ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Background: Predicting fire behaviour is an ongoing challenge in temperate peatlands and heathlands, where live fuels can form the dominant fuel load for wildfire spread, and where spatial heterogeneity in fuel moisture is important but not typically represented in fuel models. Aims: We examine the impact of fuel moisture variation on simulated fire behaviour across a temperate peatland/heathland landscape. Methods: We collected field measurements of fuel moisture content in Calluna vulgaris shrub from 36 sites across the North Yorkshire Moors, United Kingdom. We used these to define fuel moisture inputs within existing shrubland fuel models to simulate fire behaviour in BehavePlus. Key results: Simulated rates of spread varied with fuel moisture content; average mean variance of 23–80% from the landscape average rate of spread. The driest sites had simulated rates of spread up to 135% above the landscape average and the wettest sites up to 86% below average. Fuel model selection dramatically impacted simulated rates of spread by a factor of five. Conclusions: We need to constrain the role of live fuel moisture within temperate fuel models to develop accurate fire behaviour predictions. Implications: Capturing cross-landscape heterogeneity in fire behaviour is important for safe and effective land and wildfire management decision-making. Predicted fire behaviour varies significantly when cross-landscape fuel moisture differences are included in simulations. In temperate fuels, where live fuel moisture is not well represented in models, this may create dangerous situations where fire behaviour is underpredicted during the typical spring fire season, which has implications for fire management decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Variation in ecological scorecards and their potential for wider use.
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Gorman, Thomas, Kindermann, Gesche, Healy, Kevin, and Morley, Terry R.
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ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,ECOLOGICAL assessment ,HEATHLANDS ,PEATLANDS ,LANDSCAPES - Abstract
Ecological monitoring is a vital tool to help us assess habitat condition and understand the mechanism(s) for habitat change. Yet many countries struggle to meet their monitoring requirements in part due to the high assessment workload. Rapid ecological assessment methods may have an important role to play in this regard. Following their success within several European habitats (e.g., semi-natural grasslands), they are now being developed for additional habitats such as heathlands, peatlands, and other agri-associated areas. Whilst some rapid assessments using ecological scorecards have been shown to be accurate compared to traditional ecological monitoring, less is known about the functionality of these scorecards in heterogenous landscapes. In this study, we selected four existing scorecards to test alongside a prototype. We assessed how these different scorecards measured habitat condition on the same heathland sites. We found that the choice of metrics, their score weighting, and the thresholds used for categorical scores cause scorecards to assess the same site with substantial variation (37%). Vegetation metrics were the primary cause of score variation, with vegetation structure and positive indicator species being the leading causes. Our study indicates that whilst current scorecards may be representative of project-specific goals, they may not be suitable for wider monitoring uses in their current form. Ecological scorecards have great potential to drastically increase the extent of monitoring, but caution is needed before adapting existing scorecards beyond the purposes from which they were designed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Habitat selection and movement patterns of the Raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides) in Denmark using GPS telemetry data.
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Wooldridge, Brittany, Svenning, Jens-Christian, and Pagh, Sussie
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RACCOON dog ,HABITAT selection ,TELEMETRY ,ECOLOGICAL impact ,SAND dunes ,BODIES of water ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
The Asiatic raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides) has successfully colonized Northern, Eastern, and Central Europe, following 20
th century introductions. While subject to eradication campaigns, its ecological impacts remain incompletely understood and debated. This study aims to examine the habitat preference and movement patterns of raccoon dogs in Denmark using GPS telemetry data. Habitat selection patterns were examined seasonally using Jacob's electivity index. Movement intensity (travel speed) was examined according to temporal and environmental predictors such as time of day, time of year and habitat type. Raccoon dogs showed an overall preference for peatbogs, marshes, and broadleaf tree cover, and an overall avoidance of water bodies (per se), artificial surfaces and constructions, natural material surfaces (e.g., river pebble banks, beaches, sand dunes), cultivated areas, coniferous tree cover and herbaceous vegetation, and a close to neutral selection pattern for moors and heathland. Habitat usage was generally consistent throughout the seasons for all habitat types, apart from minor shifts observed, particularly from November to February. The raccoon dog exhibited a unimodal nocturnal activity pattern throughout all seasons, with highest mean travel speeds occurring during spring and lowest during winter. Prolonged periods of higher mean daily speeds were observed during autumn. Mean speed levels also varied according to habitat type, with raccoon dogs moving slower in habitats they preferred and faster in those they did not prefer. These results indicate that raccoon dogs in Denmark adjust their habitat selection and movement patterns throughout the year, with a general preference for moist and high tree coverage areas. This information can be utilized in forecasting models for their potential future range and area use in different regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Xerothermophilous species of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) in dry-warm habitats prefer their wetter niches.
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KLEEBERG, ANDREAS, STEINHÄUSER, UPO, and LISCHEID, GUNNAR
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STAPHYLINIDAE , *ATMOSPHERIC temperature , *HUMIDITY , *HABITAT selection , *DATA loggers , *HEATHLANDS - Abstract
High temperatures that prevail at sun-exposed sites such as heaths, depressions, or on slopes, increase the risk of desiccation for rove beetles (Staphylinidae). Therefore, atmospheric and sub-atmospheric humidity determine the microclimates and thus habitat preference and activity of xerothermophilous species. In the nature reserve Marienfl ieß, a heathland in the south of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Northeast German Lowlands, air temperature and humidity were recorded year-round along a transect at 10 sites, i.e. where the vegetation was more dense and more humid than where the vegetation was sparse and it was drier, using data loggers placed in the litter layer that recorded the conditions every 30 min in 2021. Monthly visits were made to determine the biomass of vegetation, soil and litter properties, edaphic rove beetle fauna and total abundance and and that of individual species at 1 m2 sites. Statistical analysis of 365 diurnal cycles per site, with pronounced amplitude in air temperature and humidity, clearly delineated the cooler and more humid sites from warmer and drier ones. Between 10 and 22 of the 30 xerothermophilous species (73.3%), such as, e.g. Quedius persimilis Mulsant & Rey, 1876, Xantholinus gallicus Coiff ait, 1956, Cousya longitarsis (Thomson, 1867) and Euaesthetus superlatus Peyerimhoff, 1937, were recorded only at the cooler and moist sites on the heath. Comparison of the abundances and distribution of species revealed that the xerothermophilous heath-dwelling and desiccation-prone species prefer rather constant environmental conditions, i.e. niches in cool and moist habitats on warm and dry heathland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. The biology of Marchantia polymorpha subsp. ruderalis Bischl. & Boissel. Dub in nature.
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Duckett, Jeffrey G., Pressel, Silvia, and Kowal, Jill
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GENITALIA ,BIOLOGY ,SEX differentiation (Embryology) ,SPRING ,HEATHLANDS ,SEX ratio ,FOREST fires ,FUNGAL spores - Abstract
Introduction: Though used as the model liverwort in culture for several decades, the biology of Marchantia polymorpha subsp. ruderalis in nature has never been documented in detail in a single account. Methods: Here we synthesize routine field observations documented with hundreds of images of M. ruderalis colonies (or groups) showing sex differentiation over 3 years on two populations of M. ruderalis after major heathland fires in 2020. Results: Initial post-fire establishment is from airborne spores rather than a spore bank but thereafter spread is via gemmae which have less exacting germination requirements. Young sporelings are highly gemmiferous but gemmae production becomes less frequent after sex organ formation. Over the course of a year there are up to three waves of carpocephalum production with the overwhelming majority of antheridiophores appearing 2-3 months ahead of the archegoniophores though no differences in growth rates were apparent between male and female thalli. Spermatozoids are produced almost continuously throughout the year, whilst sporophyte maturation is restricted to the summer months. Discussion: Because of the asynchrony between antheridiophore and archegoniophore production a 1:1 sex ratio is only apparent over this period. The spring months see an excess of males with more females in the summer. An almost 100% fertilization rate, with fertilization distances of up to 19 m far exceeding those in all other bryophytes, is attributed to vast spermatozoid production formost of the year, dispersal on surface oil films between thalli and highly effective intra-thallus spermatozoid transport via the pegged-rhizoid water-conducting system. Archegoniophores do develop on female-only populations but have shorter stalks than those where fertilization has occurred. Eventual disappearance post fires is attributed to a fall in topsoil nutrient levels preventing new sporeling establishment and competition from Ceratodon purpureus and Polytrichum spp. Amajor drought in the summer of 2022 almost wiped out the heathland Marchantia populations but all the other bryophytes survived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Heathland management affects soil response to drought.
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Gliesch, Mariana, Sanchez, Leonardo Hinojosa, Jongepier, Evelien, Martin, Celia, Hu, Yahan, Tietema, Albert, and de Vries, Franciska T.
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HEATHLANDS , *CLIMATE feedbacks , *SOIL management , *DROUGHTS , *SOIL dynamics , *VEGETATION dynamics , *TUNDRAS - Abstract
Drought can affect ecosystem functioning by altering plant–soil interactions, posing a significant threat to vulnerable ecosystems like heathlands. In heathlands, ongoing nitrogen deposition increases the dominance of fast‐growing grasses over the slow‐growing shrub Calluna vulgaris. These changes above‐ground can influence soil dynamics and heathlands' responses to drought. Here, we assessed whether the legacy effects of drought on heathland soils depended on mowing times as a management practice commonly used to regenerate Calluna and decrease the abundance of fast‐growing grasses.Using a long‐term field experiment, we investigated if soil response to drought differed under Calluna and grasses, as well as under Calluna plants of different growth stages through different mowing times. We hypothesized that drought would decrease soil C and nutrient pools underneath grasses and younger Calluna plants through its impact on soil microbial communities.Our results show that long‐term drought decreased soil C but only underneath grasses and old Calluna, while under young Calluna, soil C increased under drought when compared to control conditions. Bacterial and fungal community composition differed between drought and control and were affected by the growth stage of Calluna but not by plant growth strategies. Furthermore, drought and Calluna growth stage‐induced changes in bacterial communities directly affected total soil C and indirectly by reducing microbial C, which was positively related to total soil C.Synthesis and applications. Understanding ecosystem response to drought is crucial for maintaining biodiversity and mitigating climate change feedbacks. Heathlands are threatened by high nitrogen deposition, a lack of management and an increasing frequency of drought. Our results emphasize the importance of frequent mowing (decadal) as a management practice that promotes a younger and more Calluna‐dominated plant community for reducing soil C losses under future climate change‐induced drought conditions. The active management of heathlands is essential not only for keeping above‐ground vegetation dynamics, but also for maintaining below‐ground soil nutrient and carbon pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Changing species dominance patterns of Boreal‐Arctic heathlands: evidence of biotic homogenization.
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Bråthen, Kari Anne, Tuomi, Maria, Kapfer, Jutta, Böhner, Hanna, and Maliniemi, Tuija
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HEATHLANDS , *BILBERRY , *HEATHER , *SPECIES , *VASCULAR plants , *TUNDRAS , *SHRUBS , *ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Heathlands are extensive systems often dominated by slow‐growing and long‐lived woody plants. These systems require longer‐term studies to capture if and how they are changing over time. In 2020, we resurveyed species richness and cover of vascular plant communities in 139 heathlands along the coastline of northern Fennoscandia, first surveyed during 1965–1975. The first survey included six heathland types, each with dominance – a cover of 25% or more – of the dwarf shrubs Calluna vulgaris, Kalmia procumbens, Betula nana, Vaccinium myrtillus and Empetrum nigrum. The two latter heathland types made up 29% and 48%, respectively, of all heathlands. In addition to the dominant dwarf shrubs giving their names to the heathland types, a few other species qualified as dominant. In the resurvey, all the heathland types had E. nigrum as the single dominant species, except for the heathland formerly dominated by B. nana. Most other species had low cover both at the time of the original survey and the resurvey. Also, the heathland types were species poor at the time of the original survey, with an average of eight vascular plant species per 4 m2 and were found equally species poor in the resurvey. Species richness differed between heathland types only at the time of the original survey, and the ratio of species exchange between the two surveys was negatively related to the original cover of E. nigrum. Here we provide a half‐century perspective on vegetation change, during which several heathland types in northern Fennoscandia have changed to Empetrum heathlands, reducing the diversity of heathland types across the Boreal to Arctic landscape. As a native plant, E. nigrum cannot be considered invasive, but its allelopathic capacity has likely already modified these heathland ecosystems and will continue to do so, reducing ecosystem multifunctionality across the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Introduction to the special issue of The Natural History of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia.
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Hopkins, A. J. M., Smith, G. T., and Saunders, D. A.
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NATURAL history , *NATURE reserves , *EXTREME weather , *PROTECTED areas , *CONSERVATION biology , *SUMMER , *COASTS , *SAND dunes , *HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Context: This paper introduces the special issue of Pacific Conservation Biology devoted to the natural history of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve on the south coast of Western Australia. Methods: This paper provides the background to the special issue. Key results: Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve was gazetted in 1967 for the conservation of the native biota, including two species; the Djimaalap/noisy scrub-bird (Atrichornis clamosus) and Ngilgaitch/Gilbert's potoroo (Potorous gilbertii), both believed extinct for over 100 years before being rediscovered on the Reserve. The Reserve is 4774.7 ha in area, with wetlands, heathlands, granite outcrops, sand dunes, beaches, cliffs, and islands. Since it was established, mean annual rainfall has decreased by 16.8%, mean annual maximum temperature has increased by 0.2°C, and mean annual minimum temperature has increased by 0.7°C. Conclusions: The paper poses the question: what do the changes of drier winters, hotter summers, and more extreme weather events mean for managers of conservation areas such as Two Peoples Bay? Implications: Changing climate will pose problems for the managers of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve in ensuring the conservation of the Djimaalap/noisy scrub-bird and Ngilgaitch/Gilbert's potoroo. Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve comprises ~5000 ha of wetlands, heathlands, granite outcrops, sand dunes, beaches, cliffs, and islands. Two species, the Djimaalap/noisy scrub-bird and Ngilgaitch/Gilbert's potoroo, were believed extinct for over 100 years before being rediscovered on the Reserve. Since the Reserve was established in 1967, rainfall has decreased, while minimum and maximum temperatures have increased. We ask what the climate change means for managers of conservation areas such as Two Peoples Bay. This article belongs to the Collection The Natural History of Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Commentary: The role of palaeoecology in reconciling biodiversity conservation, livelihoods, and carbon storage in Madagascar.
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Joseph, Grant S. and Seymour, Colleen L.
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PALEOECOLOGY ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,BIOLOGICAL extinction ,NATURAL history ,PASTORAL societies ,LIFE sciences ,HUMAN settlements - Abstract
This article provides a commentary on the role of palaeoecology in addressing the complex issues of biodiversity conservation, livelihoods, and carbon storage in Madagascar. The authors clarify their previous work and challenge the binary classification of forests and grasslands, emphasizing the need for accurate identification of anthropogenically-impacted areas for effective conservation efforts. They also discuss the ecological and societal consequences of tree removal and fire-setting practices in Madagascar. The accompanying document is a valuable list of references and citations that cover a range of topics related to vegetation changes and sediment dynamics in the Lake Alaotra region of central Madagascar. the role of fire in highland vegetation management, the impact of human activities on Madagascar's ecosystems, and the conservation of biodiversity in the country. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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11. Site Quality Models and Fuel Load Dynamic Equation Systems Disaggregated by Size Fractions and Vegetative States in Gorse and High Heath Shrublands in Galicia (NW Spain).
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Vega, José A., Álvarez-González, Juan Gabriel, Arellano-Pérez, Stéfano, Fernández, Cristina, and Ruiz-González, Ana Daría
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HEATHLANDS , *DYNAMIC loads , *DYNAMICAL systems , *FUEL quality , *BIOMASS estimation , *WILDFIRES , *FRACTIONS , *TUNDRAS - Abstract
Compatible model systems were developed for estimating fuel load dynamics in Ulex europaeus (gorse) and in Erica australis (Spanish heath) dominated shrub communities at stand level. The models were based on intensive, detailed destructive field sampling and were fitted simultaneously to fulfill the additivity principle. The models enable, for the first time, estimation of the biomass dynamics of the total shrub layer, size fractions and vegetative stage, with reasonably good accuracy. The approach used addresses the high variability in shrub biomass estimates by using a site index (SI) based on biomass levels at a reference age of 10 years. Analysis of the effect of climatic variables on site index confirmed the preference of gorse for mild temperatures and the ability of high heath communities to tolerate a wider range of temperatures. In the gorse communities, SI tended to increase as summer rainfall and the mean temperature of the coldest month increased. However, in the heath communities, no relationships were observed between SI and any of the climatic variables analyzed. The study findings may be useful for assessing and monitoring fuel hazards, updating fuel mapping, planning and implementing fuel reduction treatments and predicting fire behavior, among other important ecological and biomass use-related applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Bacterial and fungal communities in sub-Arctic tundra heaths are shaped by contrasting snow accumulation and nutrient availability.
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Männistö, Minna K, Ahonen, Saija H K, Ganzert, Lars, Tiirola, Marja, Stark, Sari, and Häggblom, Max M
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TUNDRAS , *FUNGAL communities , *BACTERIAL communities , *SNOW accumulation , *HEATHLANDS , *MICROBIAL communities , *BIOMASS - Abstract
Climate change is affecting winter snow conditions significantly in northern ecosystems but the effects of the changing conditions for soil microbial communities are not well-understood. We utilized naturally occurring differences in snow accumulation to understand how the wintertime subnivean conditions shape bacterial and fungal communities in dwarf shrub-dominated sub-Arctic Fennoscandian tundra sampled in mid-winter, early, and late growing season. Phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) and quantitative PCR analyses indicated that fungal abundance was higher in windswept tundra heaths with low snow accumulation and lower nutrient availability. This was associated with clear differences in the microbial community structure throughout the season. Members of Clavaria spp. and Sebacinales were especially dominant in the windswept heaths. Bacterial biomass proxies were higher in the snow-accumulating tundra heaths in the late growing season but there were only minor differences in the biomass or community structure in winter. Bacterial communities were dominated by members of Alphaproteobacteria, Actinomycetota, and Acidobacteriota and were less affected by the snow conditions than the fungal communities. The results suggest that small-scale spatial patterns in snow accumulation leading to a mosaic of differing tundra heath vegetation shapes bacterial and fungal communities as well as soil carbon and nutrient availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. A Holocene history of climate, fire, landscape evolution, and human activity in northeastern Iceland.
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Ardenghi, Nicolò, Harning, David J., Raberg, Jonathan H., Holman, Brooke R., Thordarson, Thorvaldur, Geirsdóttir, Áslaug, Miller, Gifford H., and Sepúlveda, Julio
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HOLOCENE Epoch ,COLONIZATION (Ecology) ,NORTH Atlantic oscillation ,CLIMATE change ,ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,FOREST fires ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Paleoclimate reconstructions across Iceland provide a template for past changes in climate across the northern North Atlantic, a crucial region due to its position relative to the global northward heat transport system and its vulnerability to climate change. The roles of orbitally driven summer cooling, volcanism, and human impact as triggers of local environmental changes in the Holocene of Iceland remain debated. While there are indications that human impact may have reduced environmental resilience during late Holocene summer cooling, it is still difficult to resolve to what extent human and natural factors affected Iceland's late Holocene landscape instability. Here, we present a continuous Holocene fire record of northeastern Iceland from proxies archived in Stóra Viðarvatn sediment. We use pyrogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pyroPAHs) to trace shifts in fire regimes, paired with continuous biomarker and bulk geochemical records of soil erosion, lake productivity, and human presence. The molecular composition of pyroPAHs and a wind pattern reconstruction indicate a naturally driven fire signal that is mostly regional. Generally low fire frequency during most of the Holocene significantly increased at 3 ka and again after 1.5 ka BP before known human settlement in Iceland. We propose that shifts in vegetation type caused by cooling summers over the past 3 kyr, in addition to changes in atmospheric circulation, such as shifts in North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) regime, led to increased aridity and biomass flammability. Our results show no evidence of faecal biomarkers associated with human activity during or after human colonisation in the 9th century CE. Instead, faecal biomarkers follow the pattern described by erosional proxies, pointing toward a negligible human presence and/or a diluted signal in the lake's catchment. However, low post-colonisation levels of pyroPAHs, in contrast to an increasing flux of erosional bulk proxies, suggest that farming and animal husbandry may have suppressed fire frequency by reducing the spread and flammability of fire-prone vegetation (e.g. heathlands). Overall, our results describe a fire frequency heavily influenced by long-term changes in climate through the Holocene. They also suggest that human colonisation had contrasting effects on the local environment by lowering its resilience to soil erosion while increasing its resilience to fire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Optimizing pH for Soil Enzyme Assays Reveals Important Biochemical Functions in Low pH Soil
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Fraser, Tandra D., Duddigan, Sarah, Diaz, Anita, Green, Iain, and Tibbett, Mark
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- 2024
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15. Integrating citizen science and multispectral satellite data for multiscale habitat management.
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Van Eupen, Camille, Maes, Dirk, Heremans, Stien, Swinnen, Kristijn R. R., Somers, Ben, and Luca, Stijn
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VEGETATION management ,CITIZEN science ,HEATHLANDS ,EDGE effects (Ecology) ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,ENDANGERED species - Abstract
Habitat management is necessary for the conservation of threatened species, yet best practices in fragmented human-dominated landscapes have remained difficult to generalise. We show that multi-scale vegetation management decisions in heathlands can be supported by integrating opportunistic citizen science data and multispectral satellite data. Opportunistic observations were gathered from ten typical, mostly threatened animal species of dry heathlands in Flanders as point records with specified precision. We considered vegetation structure at the local scale, quantified by image texture within 0.25 ha derived from multispectral satellite data, and heathland heterogeneity at the habitat scale, quantified by the diversity in heathland vegetation communities within 50 ha. Additionally, locations inside heathlands were attributed to an open, closed or anthropogenic landscape context. Point process models were used to test the impact of heathland size, vegetation structure and heathland heterogeneity on the habitat suitability of the studied species. We found that (1) heathland vegetation management can benefit habitat suitability in fragmented heathlands, but with a different approach for local management of vegetation structure in small versus large heathlands (e.g. due to micro-fragmentation effects), (2) the landscape induces positive and negative edge effects (e.g. due to a high versus low resource availability), especially in small heathlands and (3) habitat suitability is driven by both vegetation structure and heathland heterogeneity but with different relative importance for birds, butterflies and grasshoppers (e.g. due to differences in mobility). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Intraspecific variability of leaf form and function across habitat types.
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Puglielli, Giacomo, Bricca, Alessandro, Chelli, Stefano, Petruzzellis, Francesco, Acosta, Alicia T. R., Bacaro, Giovanni, Beccari, Eleonora, Bernardo, Liliana, Bonari, Gianmaria, Bolpagni, Rossano, Boscutti, Francesco, Calvia, Giacomo, Campetella, Giandiego, Cancellieri, Laura, Canullo, Roberto, Carbognani, Michele, Carboni, Marta, Carranza, Maria Laura, Castellani, Maria Beatrice, and Ciccarelli, Daniela
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HABITATS , *PLANT ecology , *HEATHLANDS , *WETLANDS , *LEAF area , *SAND dunes , *EXTRAPOLATION - Abstract
Trait‐based ecology has already revealed main independent axes of trait variation defining trait spaces that summarize plant adaptive strategies, but often ignoring intraspecific trait variability (ITV). By using empirical ITV‐level data for two independent dimensions of leaf form and function and 167 species across five habitat types (coastal dunes, forests, grasslands, heathlands, wetlands) in the Italian peninsula, we found that ITV: (i) rotated the axes of trait variation that define the trait space; (ii) increased the variance explained by these axes and (iii) affected the functional structure of the target trait space. However, the magnitude of these effects was rather small and depended on the trait and habitat type. Our results reinforce the idea that ITV is context‐dependent, calling for careful extrapolations of ITV patterns across traits and spatial scales. Importantly, our study provides a framework that can be used to start integrating ITV into trait space analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Connecting Posthumanist Thinking with GIS Practice: Explorations of a Prehistoric Heathland Landscape in Jutland, Denmark.
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Haughton, Mark
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While developments in GIS technology and methodologies continue to add great value to archaeological research, they have often fallen somewhat out of step with theoretical developments elsewhere in the discipline. The result is a technology that focuses on the practically possible—new questions emerge as and when the technology allows. While more experimental approaches exist in some sub-disciplines, such as studies of the North American Southwest or contemporary archaeology, these are not regularly incorporated elsewhere. This paper explores the possibilities for GIS-based research to engage with current theoretical debates surrounding posthumanism, and particularly assemblage thinking. A case study focuses on the European prehistoric heathlands, arguing that limiting our investigations to traditional realms of GIS practice means that much of the detail that defines different types of landscape disappears from view. By taking inspiration from assemblage thinking, I explore the multiple species that make up heathlands and define how they were experienced and interacted with in the Early Bronze Age of Denmark. Thus, I argue that GIS and posthumanism have much to offer one another in archaeological practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Conserving diversity, distinctiveness and connectivity in the Sunshine Coast heathlands, Queensland, Australia.
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Pearl, Hilary, Ryan, Tim, Howard, Marion, Shimizu, Yoko, and Shapcott, Alison
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HEATHLANDS , *REMNANT vegetation , *SUNSHINE , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *FRAGMENTED landscapes , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Australia is committed to global area‐based conservation targets whilst ensuring its National Reserve system is representative of ecosystem types. However, concern remains for the increasing habitat loss and fragmentation, and the possible impacts of loss of connectivity between remnant vegetation. This study uses a range of diversity metrics to examine the biodiversity conservation status of the Sunshine Coast heathlands, in the South Eastern Queensland bioregion. The pre‐clearing and remnant extent, and the protection status of the nine heath Regional Ecosystems were calculated. Fragmentation and connectivity were examined by comparing heath patch sizes, and by calculating the distance between patches, from pre‐clearing estimates, until 2019. Diversity metrics for the Regional Ecosystems, including phylogenetic metrics, were tested for correlation with habitat extent, patch size, patch number and distance between patches. Of the pre‐clearing extent, 62% of Sunshine Coast heathlands remain and 46% is protected in National Parks. Levels of protection in National Parks vary across the Local Government Areas, and between Regional Ecosystems, and the priority Regional Ecosystems for further protection were identified. There has been habitat loss resulting in reduced patch sizes, and fragmentation due to urbanization, but the number of patches of heath remains intact, and connectivity in terms of distance between patches remains stable. Phylogenetic dispersion, but not diversity, was correlated with the extent of heath and the number of patches. This highlights the opportunity to maintain biodiversity in these heathlands, with the value of small patches of heath identified as key to maintaining connectivity in the coastal lowlands, distinctiveness in the montane heaths and dunes, and overall phylogenetic dispersion. This study has shown how a variety of diversity metrics and landscape analyses can inform on priority areas for biodiversity conservation in the heathlands of an increasingly urbanized region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. How Do Nitrogen Deposition, Mowing, and Deer Grazing Drive Vegetation Changes on Dune Heaths?
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Kaae, Mathias Emil, Hu, Fenjuan, Bak, Jesper Leth, Strandberg, Morten Tune, and Damgaard, Christian Frølund
- Subjects
VEGETATION dynamics ,SAND dunes ,PLANT conservation ,GRAZING ,HEATHLANDS ,DEER ,SHRUBS - Abstract
Heathland vegetation has undergone significant changes in the past century, e.g., due to airborne pollutants and a lack of proper management. Understanding the interactions between these factors in combination is pivotal for heathland conservation. Here, we studied the vegetation changes at a dune heath in a four-year manipulation experiment analysing the combined effects of nitrogen deposition, mowing, and deer grazing. Our results showed no significant effect of nitrogen deposition and deer grazing on plant growth and cover of dwarf shrubs within the experimental plots. However, high loads of nitrogen decreased bryophyte cover and increased the growth and cover of sand sedge Carex arenaria L. Mowing adversely affected the dwarf shrub community, e.g., the dwarf shrub species crowberry Empetrum nigrum L., and facilitated increased cover and plant growth of graminoids. Plant growth and the cover of C. arenaria increased in plots without deer grazing, whereas bryophyte cover decreased significantly without grazing. We do not recommend intensive mowing of vegetation as a conservation method for dune heaths because it promotes graminoids. From a conservation aspect, it is essential to consider the effect of deer on heathlands because they both impede some species and benefit others and mitigate the adverse effects of nitrogen deposition on dune heaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Abiotic correlates with diversity and distinctiveness in Sunshine Coast heathlands: Moisture, volcanic landscapes and patterned mounds.
- Author
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Pearl, Hilary, Ryan, Tim, Howard, Marion, Shimizu, Yoko, and Shapcott, Alison
- Subjects
- *
HEATHLANDS , *SUNSHINE , *VEGETATION patterns , *MOISTURE , *LANDSCAPES , *COASTS - Abstract
The ongoing management and protection of conservation areas can be informed by understanding factors that affect the integrity of these communities. Abiotic factors associated with diversity and phylogenetic dispersion within communities, as well as distinctiveness between communities, may potentially be impacted by climate change or changes in hydrology due to urbanization. This study used a range of diversity metrics, along with nominal and quantitative abiotic data, to examine correlates with diversity patterns in the Sunshine Coast heathlands, ecosystems under threat from urban development. Metrics for 80 heathland sites over a variety of substrates, moisture levels and topographic factors were compared using univariate and multivariate statistics. Moisture is a key abiotic factor correlated with the diversity and distinctiveness of heath, and also with higher phylogenetic dispersion of moist and wet sites, indicating possible refuges. Vegetation composition patterns were distinct in the heaths on Tertiary and Triassic rocky volcanic substrates, with the overlapping composition of heath on other substrates, confirming the tolerance of many heath species to a variety of substrates. Patterned natural 'mounds' and 'trenches' were associated with phylogenetic evenness and are possible refugia. Multivariate analysis had a weak positive correlation of environmental factors with vegetation and phylogenetic composition, emphasizing the complexity of correlates with diversity for the heathlands. This study suggests that both the management of hydrological changes and protection of potential refugial areas are likely to be critical in maintaining the integrity and diversity of the Sunshine Coast heathlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Impact of Phytophthora dieback on a key heathland species Xanthorrhoea australis (Asphodelaceae) (austral grasstree) and floristic composition in the eastern Otways, Victoria.
- Author
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Wilson, B. A., Casey, S. P., Garkaklis, M. J., Learmonth, C., Wevill, T., and Sinclair, Steve
- Abstract
Context. The plant pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi causes severe declines in susceptible vegetation, including loss of plant species, vegetation structure and fauna abundance. Grasstrees (Xanthorrhoea spp.) are keystone species that provide optimal habitat for vertebrates and invertebrates and are highly susceptible to the pathogen. Although effects in the Otway Ranges have been assessed at specific sites, there is less knowledge across the landscape on the extent of loss of Xanthorrhoea australis (austral grasstree). Aims. The aims were thus to assess impacts at three Heathy Woodland sites and to determine the magnitude of loss of X. australis and susceptible species losses. Methods. Floristic composition, species cover or abundance, and basal area of X. australis were recorded in quadrats within treatments (uninfested, infested, post-infested vegetation). Analyses included floristics (PRIMER v7), significant effects (ANOSIM), species contribution to similarity/dissimilarity (SIMPER). Species richness and susceptible species cover were analysed using two-way crossed ANOVAs to detect the influence of site, treatment, and interactions. Key results. Species composition of uninfested vegetation was significantly different to infested and post-infested vegetation, with susceptible species more abundant in uninfested areas. Post-infested vegetation had the lowest percentage cover of susceptible species. The mean percentage cover of X. australis in uninfested vegetation (43%) was 10-fold greater than in infested areas (4.3%) and extremely low in post-infested vegetation (0.9%). Conclusions. Susceptible species were subject to density declines and extirpation, and the loss of X. australis resulted in major structural vegetation changes. Implications. These results have severe implications for heathy woodland communities and reliant fauna. Limiting the spread of P. cinnamomi and protecting grasstrees is critical for their security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Two new species of Inocybe from Mediterranean Cistaceae heathlands.
- Author
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Fachada, Vasco, Bandini, Ditte, and Beja-Pereira, Albano
- Subjects
- *
HEATHLANDS , *SPECIES , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *PHYLOGENY , *MORPHOLOGY , *AGARICALES - Abstract
This study explored a heathland region in Portugal, and through morphology, biogeography, and multilocus phylogeny, two new species of Inocybaceae are described. The first species, Inocybe iberilepora, belongs to "I. flocculosa group," whereas the second species, Inocybe phaeosquamosa, belongs to a relatively isolated and understudied clade, distantly related to I. furfurea and allies. Both species are tied to a west Mediterranean distribution and ecology, associating with the local Cistaceae ecosystems. By characterizing these new species, our research contributes to the understanding of European Funga and enriches the knowledge of the genus Inocybe on a global scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Water beetles (Coleoptera) associated with Afrotemperate Forest patches in the Garden Route National Park, South Africa.
- Author
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Bird, Matthew S., Bilton, David T., Mlambo, Musa C., and Perissinotto, Renzo
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL parks & reserves , *TEMPERATE forest ecology , *BEETLES , *AQUATIC invertebrates , *HEATHLANDS , *AQUATIC animals , *FOREST animals - Abstract
Southern Afrotemperate Forest is concentrated in the southern Cape region of South Africa and whilst it is relatively well known botanically, the fauna, specifically the aquatic invertebrate fauna, is poorly documented. The majority of remaining intact forest habitat is contained within the Garden Route National Park (GRNP), which straddles the provincial boundary between the Western and Eastern Cape. This study undertakes a survey of the water beetle fauna inhabiting the GRNP. The aquatic ecosystems within temperate forests of the region are poorly researched from an ecological and biodiversity perspective, despite being known to harbour endemic invertebrate elements. We collected water beetles and in situ physico-chemical data from a total of 31 waterbodies across the park over two seasons (summer and late winter) in 2017. The waterbodies sampled were mostly small freshwater perennial streams and isolated forest ponds. A total of 61 beetle taxa was recorded (29 Adephaga, 32 Polyphaga) from these waterbodies. The water beetle fauna of these forests appears to be diverse and contains many species endemic to the fynbos-dominated Cape Floristic Region, but very few of the species appear to be forest specialists. This is in contrast to the fynbos heathland habitat of the region, which harbours a high number of water beetle species endemic to this habitat, often with Gondwanan affinity. Our study is the first to document the water beetles of Afrotemperate Forests in the southern Cape region and provides an important baseline for future work on such habitats in the region and in other parts of southern Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Prescribed burning can promote recovery of Atlantic coastal heathlands suffering dieback after extreme drought events.
- Author
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Velle, Liv Guri, Haugum, Siri Vatsø, Telford, Richard J., Thorvaldsen, Pål, and Vandvik, Vigdis
- Subjects
- *
PRESCRIBED burning , *DROUGHT management , *DIEBACK , *DROUGHTS , *HEATHLANDS , *CREMATION , *FACTORIAL experiment designs - Abstract
Questions: During the winter of 2014, an intense drought combined with sub‐zero temperatures resulted in a massive Calluna dieback in Norwegian heathlands. We studied the initial vegetation recovery under two management approaches: natural recovery and prescribed burning. We hypothesized that natural recovery will be slower in more drought‐affected sites, whereas burning will facilitate post‐fire recovery in all sites by effectively removing dead and damaged heath. Both natural recovery and post‐fire succession will be slower in the north. Location: Calluna heath in seven sites spanning an approx. 600‐km latitudinal gradient along the coast of Norway (60.22–65.69° N). Methods: After a natural drought, 10 permanent plots per site were either burnt or left for natural recovery. Vegetation data were recorded annually in 2016 (pre‐fire) and 2017–2019 (post‐fire) reflecting a factorial repeated‐measures design (n = 280). The data were analyzed using mixed‐effects models. Results: Two years after the drought, we observed high but variable Calluna damage and mortality. Over the four years of study, damaged Calluna recovered, whereas dead Calluna showed little recovery. Both the extent of the damage and mortality, as well as the rate of natural recovery, are only weakly related to site climate or environmental factors. Fire efficiently removed dead and damaged Calluna and facilitated post‐fire successional dynamics and recovery in a majority of sites. Conclusions: Extreme winter drought resulted in substantial and often persistent damage and dieback on Calluna along the latitudinal gradient. In sites with high mortality, prescribed burning removed the dead biomass and, in some cases, facilitated vegetation recovery. Traditional heathland management, which uses burning to facilitate all‐year grazing by Old Norse sheep in Atlantic coastal heathlands, can be an efficient tool to mitigate dieback events and more generally to increase resistance to and resilience after extreme drought events in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Vocal activity of the Eastern Ground Parrot (Pezoporus wallicus wallicus) and implications for acoustic monitoring efforts.
- Author
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Prior, Lana, Aland, Kieran, Levengood, Alexis L., and Potvin, Dominique A.
- Subjects
- *
PARROTS , *LUNAR phases , *BIRDING sites , *RAINFALL , *ENVIRONMENTAL auditing , *HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Vocalisations are a key component of communication for species that employ crypsis. The Eastern Ground Parrot (Pezoporus wallicus wallicus) is one such species that lives within dense heathland habitats in eastern Australia. Passive acoustic monitoring is now a common method used for avian monitoring and conservation programmes. For implementation of this method to be successful, we require a minimum level of understanding of the environmental and behavioural factors that may influence vocal activity. We tested how Eastern Ground Parrot call rate and chorus duration fluctuated across key temporal, environmental and meteorological variations over one year using passive acoustic monitoring from one site. Season, moon phase and days since rainfall predicted vocal activity of the birds at this site. Our results demonstrate the importance of considering the behavioural response of species to environmental conditions to account for potential bias in the interpretation of passive acoustic monitoring data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Assessing the relation between geodiversity and species richness in mountain heaths and tundra landscapes.
- Author
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Salminen, Henriikka, Tukiainen, Helena, Alahuhta, Janne, Hjort, Jan, Huusko, Karoliina, Grytnes, John-Arvid, Pacheco-Riaño, L. Camila, Kapfer, Jutta, Virtanen, Risto, and Maliniemi, Tuija
- Subjects
GEODIVERSITY ,SPECIES diversity ,TUNDRAS ,HEATHLANDS ,CONTINUOUS groups ,PLANT species diversity ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling ,LANDSCAPES - Abstract
Context: Recent studies show that geodiversity—the diversity of Earth's landforms, materials, and processes—has a positive relationship with biodiversity at a landscape scale. However, there is a substantial lack of evidence from finer scales, although this knowledge could improve the understanding of biodiversity patterns. Objectives: We investigate whether plot-scale geodiversity and plant species richness (vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens, and total richness) are positively linked in different tundra landscapes. Methods: We collected geodiversity (presence of different geofeatures) and plant species richness data from 165 sites in three distinct regions: isolated low-lying mountain heaths, and in sporadic and continuous mountain heaths and tundra. We used non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination to explore the correlations between the composition of geofeatures and species richness, followed by univariate and multivariate generalized linear models (GLM), to assess whether georichness is important for species richness. Results: Geofeature composition was linked to species richness in all regions, as indicated by NMDS ordination. Both univariate and multivariate GLM models showed statistically significant relationship between species richness and georichness in all studied species richness groups in continuous Arctic-alpine tundra. Additionally, there was a positive link between georichness and lichen richness in isolated boreal mountain tops. Main conclusions: We showed that plot-scale geodiversity has a positive relationship with species richness, yet the effect varies regionally and between species groups. Our study provides strong empirical evidence that geodiversity supports species richness in continuous Arctic-alpine tundra. This information can be used in species richness models but also be applied in biodiversity management and conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Habitat use by the eastern pygmy-possum in a coastal woodland–heathland mosaic.
- Author
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Goldingay, Ross L.
- Subjects
SPRING ,HABITATS ,AUTUMN ,FLOWERING time ,HEATHLANDS ,TREE cavities ,LACTATION - Abstract
Understanding patterns of habitat use is required to conserve species and to manage their habitats. I used detections of 156 individual eastern pygmy-possums (Cercartetus nanus) within artificial cavities to investigate habitat use across 18 ha of a woodland–heathland mosaic. Detection of breeding females was highest in autumn (March to May) and winter, during the flowering period of Banksia ericifolia. Detection was over two times higher in woodland compared with heathland. This pattern was not influenced by variation in flowering or hollow abundance, which were equivalent across the two habitats. Protection from the weather may drive this pattern. Adult males were detected most frequently in autumn, coinciding with the beginning of female reproduction. They were detected equally in woodland and heathland. Why detection was lower in winter and spring is unclear but may arise from female aggression, forcing males to use natural shelters away from lactating females. Subadults were detected most frequently in spring and summer, coinciding with independence and dispersal. Subadults preferred woodland, reflecting where they were reared. This study has provided new insights into the behavioural ecology of this species, but further studies are needed to better understand how foraging and breeding influence shelter site use. I used detections of 156 individual eastern pygmy-possums within artificial cavities to investigate habitat use across 18 ha of a woodland–heathland mosaic. Differences were observed among breeding females, adult males and subadult pygmy-possums in the season of highest detection. Breeding females and subadults had higher detection in woodland compared with heathland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Anthropogenic Heathlands in Prehistoric Atlantic Europe: Review and Future Prospects.
- Author
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Ombashi, Havananda and Løvschal, Mette
- Subjects
- *
HEATHLANDS , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *PALYNOLOGY , *HEATHER , *PASTORAL societies , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Heathlands are unique cultural landscapes that once existed across vast stretches of northern Europe. Their deep-time persistence has formed an intrinsic part of economic and cultural practices. Such a complex interaction requires interdisciplinary approaches, including archaeology, across multiple regions to fully grasp all its aspects. The authors of this article review how research has been conducted in prehistoric heathlands across six nations in north-western Europe and outline the heaths' general characteristics. They discuss the major issues in that research, namely recurring narratives derived from history, an overall absence of consideration of the cultural aspects of heathlands, and a paucity of cross-regional initiatives. They suggest a series of theoretical and methodological approaches to improve this situation across expanded geographical and temporal scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Moderate nitrogen retention in temperate heath ecosystem after elevated CO2, drought and warming through 7 years.
- Author
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Andresen, Louise C., Ambus, Per, Beier, Claus, and Michelsen, Anders
- Subjects
- *
HEATHLANDS , *SOIL stabilization , *DROUGHTS , *ECOSYSTEMS , *STABLE isotopes , *CARBON dioxide - Abstract
Nitrogen (N) dynamic is one of the main controlling factors of responses to climate change in N‐limited terrestrial ecosystems, which rely on nutrient recycling and retention. In this study we investigate the N partitioning in ecosystem compartments of a grassland heath, and the impact of multiple climate change factors on long‐term N retention after 15N pulse labelling. The impacts of elevated carbon dioxide (eCO2), warming and drought and the treatments in combination on ecosystem N retention were investigated in a field scale manipulation experiment. A 6‐year time‐course was assessed by pulse‐labelling with the stable N isotope 15N and by sampling after 1 day, 1 year and 6 years. After 6 years we observed that the total ecosystem retained 42% of the amended 15N across treatments (recovery of the amended 15N in the pool). The fate of the applied 15N was mainly stabilization in soil, with 36% 15N recovery in soil, while the plant compartment and microbial biomass each retained only 1%–2% of the added 15N. This suggests a moderate retention of N, for all treatments, as compared to similar long‐term studies of forest ecosystems. A decreased ammonium and vegetation N pool combined with higher 15N retention in the soil under eCO2 treatments suggests that eCO2 promoted processes that immobilize N in soil, while warming counteracted this when combined with eCO2. Drought treatments contrastingly increased the vegetation N pool. We conclude that as the organic soil layer has the main capacity for N storage in a temperate heathland‐grassland, it is important for buffering nutrient availability and maintaining a resilient ecosystem. However, the full treatment combination of drought, warming and eCO2 did not differ in 15N recovery from the control, suggesting unchanged long‐term consequences of climate change on retention of pulse added N in this ecosystem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Assessment of the dynamic trajectories and maritime character of Armorican cliff-top coastal heathlands.
- Author
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Glemarec, Erwan and Bioret, Frédéric
- Subjects
HEATHLANDS ,COASTAL forests ,EUROPEAN communities ,DYNAMIC stability ,CONSERVATION & restoration ,PROTECTED areas - Abstract
Atlantic coastal cliff heathlands are chamaephytic vegetation dominated by Ericaceae, most often associated to Fabaceae (Ulex) and integrated from a phytosociological point of view into alliance of Dactylido oceanicae-Ulicion maritimi Géhu 1975 (class of Calluno vulgaris-Ulicetea minoris Braun-Blanq. & Tüxen ex Klika & Hadač 1944). This alliance gathers coastal heathlands under marine in- fluences whose physiognomy is marked by prostrate or halo-anemomorphic chamaephytes. All Atlantic heathlands are included into habitats of European community interest which justify the designation of Natura 2000 sites. Within these protected areas, heathland conservation or restoration management issues raise the question of the choice of nature and frequency of management methods. For that, it seems important to understand the dynamics of cliff-top coastal heathlands. Stable heathlands, considered as permanent vegetation of primary character, can be managed without any intervention, while heathlands characterized by a progressive dynamic may be subject to interventionist management. The aim of this work is to present the main determinant abiotic and biotic factors driving the cliff-top coastal heathlands. Human uses may influence the composition and structure of these vegetation. This approach helps to assess the primary or secondary character of cliff-top coastal heathlands vegetation, their stability or dynamic. This article clarifies the notions of primitive, primary and secondary coastal heathlands. It proposes criteria to differentiate stable heathlands and unstable heathlands which are characterized by a progressive dynamic towards coastal scrublands or forest: abiotic conditions, floristic combination, physiognomy. The synphytosociological methodology is useful for establishing the typology of the series, permaseries and minoriseries, in which the different types of cliff-top coastal heathlands are included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ferdinand Mueller’s unfulfilled quest: Early attempts to introduce Verticordia oculata to ornamental horticulture.
- Author
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Dowe, John Leslie
- Subjects
- *
ORNAMENTAL horticulture , *HEATHLANDS , *RARE plants , *BOTANICAL gardens , *BOTANICAL specimens - Published
- 2023
32. The impact of plant diversity and vegetation composition on bumblebee colony fitness.
- Author
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Verbeke, Sebastiaan, Boeraeve, Margaux, Carpentier, Sebastien, Jacquemyn, Hans, and Pozo, María I.
- Subjects
- *
PLANT diversity , *BEE colonies , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *FRAGMENTED landscapes , *POLLEN , *HEATHLANDS - Abstract
The current decline in pollinators may disrupt ecosystems and ecosystem services with potentially harmful effects on nature and human society. While the importance of habitat loss and fragmentation, pollution and increased disease risk in driving pollinator decline has been clearly demonstrated, the impact of resource diversity is less well understood. In this study, we investigated the effect of pollen diversity and composition on reproductive success and fitness of Bombus terrestris colonies. We asked the question whether a higher plant diversity results in a more diverse diet, lower pathogen incidence and a higher colony fitness. To answer these questions, colonies of lab‐reared bumblebees were placed in species‐poor heathlands and species‐rich semi‐natural grasslands that strongly differed in plant community composition and diversity. We examined pollen loads on the bodies of foragers and identified the plant taxa present in the realized diet via DNA metabarcoding of the ITS2 marker. Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) was used to compare peptide composition of pollen samples from both habitats. Colony fitness was assessed by counting the number of sexuals produced by the colony at the end of its cycle. At the same time, colonies were examined for parasite incidence. Pollen composition and diversity on pollinators' bodies differed significantly between bees foraging in grasslands and heathlands. Concomitantly, peptide composition differed significantly between pollen samples from grasslands and heathlands. Contrary to our prediction, colonies developed significantly better in heathland sites than in grasslands. In addition, the relationship between colony fitness and pollen diversity was weak and varied between the two habitats. Pathogen incidence was very low and not affected by habitat. Overall, our results indicate that plant diversity is not necessarily a good predictor of colony fitness, and that vegetation composition and associated differences in both the quantity and quality of pollen are more important than pollen diversity per se. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Soil Seed Bank Role in Mountainous Heathland Ecosystems after Fire and Inorganic Nitrogen Fertilization.
- Author
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Alday, Josu G., Calvo, Leonor, Rodríguez, José Luis Fernández, and Valbuena, Luz
- Subjects
SOIL seed banks ,ECOSYSTEMS ,COMMUNITIES ,MOUNTAIN soils ,ATMOSPHERIC nitrogen ,HABITATS ,COMPOSITION of seeds ,PRESCRIBED burning - Abstract
Calluna vulgaris-dominated heathlands are a priority habitat type in Annex I of the Habitats Directive (92/43/ECC, habitat code 4060). In the Iberian Peninsula, the landscape of the Cantabrian Mountain range has great heterogeneity due to human management during the last 10,000 years. Another factor that can affect these communities is the increase in human-induced atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition. During the last century, there has been a dramatic increase in N deposition rates. For all these reasons, it is important to know the regeneration dynamics of the heathlands in the context of the disturbances that these communities currently face (i.e., N deposition, fire, and decrease in sheep grazing) in the Cantabrian Mountain range. In this study, we characterized the plant species composition and soil seed bank after prescribed burning in three heathlands on their southern distribution limit in Spain, to gain insights into regenerative capacity and conservation of these communities. The results obtained suggest that the post-burn soil seed bank could restore Calluna-dominated vegetation in these habitats, indicating that the restoration potential from the soil seed bank after wildfires of these habitats is high. Our results also suggest that, in the short term after burning, the main characteristic species such as Calluna and Erica are recovered, which is fundamental to maintain the heathland community structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Disentangling the effects of biomass and productivity in plant competition.
- Author
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Michalet, Richard, Delerue, Florian, and Liancourt, Pierre
- Subjects
- *
PLANT competition , *PLANT biomass , *PLANT productivity , *FOREST biomass , *COMMUNITIES , *ACADEMIC debating - Abstract
The relationship between competition and productivity in plant communities is unclear, and this is likely to be due to (1) a confusion in the literature between productivity and biomass, (2) the lack of studies assessing variation in competition in all combinations of biomass and productivity. We assessed the outcome of plant–plant interactions by removing the neighbors around five focal species in 14 herbaceous communities with contrasting biomasses and productivities: meadows with high biomass and productivity, heathlands with high biomass and low productivity, understory communities of deciduous forests with low biomass and high productivity and calcareous grasslands with low biomass and low productivity. Competition intensity was quantified with the relative interaction index (RII) calculated for both survival and growth of the transplanted targets assessed with the increase in leaf number. To examine which traits better explain variation in competition and what drives variation in diversity, we also quantified litter decomposition rate, species composition and diversity and six morphological traits related to plant size and growth rate for eight dominant species of each community. Our main questions were: (1) Is competition mostly related to biomass or productivity? (2) Which traits of the community dominants better explain variation in competition? (3) Is variation in competition and related traits correlated with variation in diversity? Competition for survival significantly increased with increasing community biomass (but not productivity). In addition, competition for survival increased with the size traits and competitive effects of the dominant species of the communities, whereas diversity decreased. Competition for growth also increased with increasing productivity, but only for high‐biomass communities. Additionally, the increase in competition for growth with increasing soil fertility, as measured with litter decomposition rate, was only due to an increase in target growth in plots without neighbors and was unrelated to community competitive effects and species diversity. The results of our study illustrate how the confusion between productivity and biomass could have contributed to the long‐standing debate on variation in competition along productivity gradients and its consequence for diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Psammophilous Grasslands and Other Open Sandy Habitats in the Sandomierz Basin as a Refuge for Threatened Orthoptera in Poland.
- Author
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BOBREK, Rafał and WILK, Tomasz
- Subjects
- *
ORTHOPTERA , *ECOLOGICAL succession , *GRASSLANDS , *ENDANGERED species , *HEATHLANDS , *HABITATS - Abstract
Psammophilous grasslands are declining in Europe due to ecological succession and anthropogenic pressures, yet they group many specialised invertebrates of early successional biotopes. We investigated the occurrence of six threatened species of Orthoptera in 135 patches of psammophilous grasslands and other open sand-related habitats (dry heaths, sandy roads, sand pits) located in the Sandomierz Basin (SE Poland). The aim was to verify whether these habitats, and especially the active military range, serve as a refuge for any of the selected species. Localities of Podisma pedestris and Calliptamus italicus found in the study area covering 0.7% of Poland's territory represented a significant proportion (50 and 18%, respectively) of UTM grid squares known to be currently occupied by these species in the country. In the regional scale of southern Poland, studied habitats also accumulated a large proportion (ca. 17%) of the current localities of Oedipoda caerulescens. However, for Aiolopus thalassinus, Psophus stridulus and Sphingonotus caerulans the importance of the Sandomierz Basin as a country wide refuge was rather minor. Five of the six target species were found on the military range, with two (P. pedestris, P. stridulus) recorded only there. These results indicate that sand-related habitats are important refuges for some threatened orthopterans in the region and should be actively protected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Burnt wood management enhances soil multifunctionality at the medium term after a large wildfire in north-west Spain.
- Author
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Fernández-Guisuraga, José Manuel, Calvo, Leonor, Huerta, Sara, and Marcos, Elena
- Subjects
SOIL management ,SCOTS pine ,NUTRIENT cycles ,WILDFIRES ,SOIL fertility ,WILDFIRE prevention - Abstract
Background: Mulching and burnt wood treatments are commonly applied to prevent the loss of soil quality and erosion, but their effect on soil multifunctionality remains unexplored. Aims: We filled this gap by assessing the medium-term (4 years) effects of these treatments on soil multifunctionality after a large wildfire in NW Spain. Methods: Straw mulching (SM) and cut plus lopping (CpL) treatments were applied in high-severity affected areas of heathland plant communities. CpL areas had been afforested with Scots pine 15 years before the fire. We considered four soil functions estimated in treated and burned control plots 4 years after fire: (1) carbon regulation; (2) water regulation; (3) soil fertility; and (4) nutrient cycling. The functions were integrated into a multifunctionality index and linear models were used to evaluate treatments effect. Key results: SM had no impact on individual functions and multifunctionality. Conversely, CpL with burnt Scots pine wood was able to sustain higher levels of multiple functions simultaneously than control areas. Consistent trade-offs between soil functions emerged in control areas for both treatments. Conclusions: Burnt wood could ensure long-lasting effects to promote soil multifunctionality in Mediterranean ecosystems. Implications: We recommend using a multifunctionality approach to avoid biases in treatment success. Post-fire treatment consisting of leaving burnt logs and felled branches in close contact with the forest floor promotes the ability of the soil to sustain high values of multiple functions simultaneously in the medium term after wildfire, as compared to straw mulching application. (This paper is part of a Special Issue that includes papers on research presented at the IX International Conference on Forest Fire Research, Coimbra, Portugal, November 2022.) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Drivers of soil temperature variation in alpine lichen heaths and shrub vegetation during the summer.
- Author
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Aartsma, Peter, Odland, Arvid, Reinhardt, Stefanie, and Renssen, Hans
- Subjects
SOIL temperature ,HEATHLANDS ,LICHENS ,SHRUBS ,LEAD in soils ,TUNDRAS - Abstract
Lichen heaths are decreasing in abundance in alpine and Arctic areas because of an increased competition with shrubs. This shift in vegetation might have important consequences for the soil temperature. The aim of this study is to find the drivers of the variation in soil temperature below lichen heaths and shrubs. Moreover, we want to gain more insight in the variability of the soil temperature below lichen heaths. We measured the soil temperature in thirty lichen plots and fifteen shrub plots in an alpine area in southern Norway during July and August 2019. We applied several treatments to study the drivers behind the variation in soil temperature between lichen heaths and shrub vegetation. We found that the average soil temperature was 1.45°C higher below lichen heaths than below shrub vegetation. Moreover, we measured a difference in soil temperature of 1.66°C between north- and south-facing lichen heaths, which contributes to the small-scale spatial variability in soil temperature below lichen heaths. Based on our experiments, we conclude that the buffering capacity of the litter layer below shrubs and shading of the soil by the shrub canopy lead to a lower soil temperature below shrubs compared to lichen heaths during the summer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Resilience of Mediterranean communities to fire depends on burn severity and type of ecosystem.
- Author
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Huerta, Sara, Marcos, Elena, Fernández-García, Víctor, and Calvo, Leonor
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COMMUNITIES ,ECOSYSTEMS ,ECOLOGICAL resilience ,WILDFIRE prevention ,GROUND vegetation cover ,HEATHLANDS ,SHRUBLANDS - Abstract
Copyright of Fire Ecology is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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39. Mapping the ecological resilience of Atlantic postglacial heathlands.
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Løvschal, Mette and Damgaard, Christian F.
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ECOLOGICAL resilience , *ECOLOGICAL mapping , *HEATHLANDS , *ATMOSPHERIC nitrogen , *CULTURAL values , *PREDICTION models - Abstract
Anthropogenic heathlands are semi‐natural ecosystems with a unique cultural and biodiversity value, considered worthy of preservation across most of the world. Their rate of loss, however, is alarming. Currently, we know little about the heathlands' actual span of resilience affordances and their association with abiotic and anthropogenic factors, including how much additional intervention they need to persist. Consequently, we are missing out on vital knowledge for conservation, management and the historical persistence of heathlands.This paper develops a method to assess the ecological resilience affordances of Atlantic postglacial heaths in the absence of human management. We use 12 existing cases of heathland succession to establish a four‐step resilience grade for each site, which we regress onto a series of explaining factors and use it in predicting heath resilience across postglacial Atlantic Northern Europe.We find that temperature, humidity, elevation and sandiness have a positive correlation with high heathland resilience. Our predictive mapping shows an uneven distribution of ecological heath resilience across Atlantic Northern Europe within an area of 1,000 × 1,200 km of 5 × 5 km resolution.Historic heathland distributions far exceed areas that afford high heath resilience, suggesting that heath distribution and persistence depend on both abiotic and anthropogenic factors.Policy implications: The map predicting the ecological resilience of Atlantic postglacial heaths can be used by managers working towards heath preservation and restoration to prioritize conservation efforts and to plan management practices across Atlantic Northern Europe. Together with the predictive model, it provides an important initial screening tool to assess heathland resilience in the absence of management as well as the impact of atmospheric nitrogen. The results are equally relevant for scholars who are interested in humans' role in increasing and decreasing ecosystem resilience. Our predictive method can be applied in other regions across the world by adding regionally specific variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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40. INFLUENCE OF VOXEL SIZE AND VOXEL CONNECTIVITY ON THE 3D MODELLING OF AUSTRALIAN HEATHLAND PARAMETERS.
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Homainejad, N., Zlatanova, S., Sepasgozar, S. M. E., and Pfeifer, N.
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POINT cloud ,GEOMETRIC surfaces ,THREE-dimensional modeling ,HEATHLANDS ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,GENERALIZATION - Abstract
Point clouds acquired through laser scanning techniques are applied in the three-dimensional modelling of vegetation. They provide the three-dimensional coordinates of geometric surfaces with attributes. However, raw point clouds are unstructured and do not provide semantic, geometric, or topological information about an object. Voxelisation is a method for structuring point clouds. It is a generalisation of point clouds and therefore the voxel size and the voxel neighbourhood play a critical role in the processing. This research explores the influence of voxelisation of point clouds acquired of heathland in Australia and how it influences the three-dimensional modelling and the representation of important heathland structure using different voxel sizes and voxel connectivities. Voxel sizes of 0.4 m, 0.6 m, 1.0 m, 1.2 m and 1.6 m with a voxel neighbourhood connectivity of 6, 18 and 26 are examined for three-dimensional modelling and segmentation of heathland vegetation in Australia. The results indicate that the choice of voxel size and the voxel connectivity influence the representation of important heathland parameters. A smaller voxel size of 0.4 m provides a detailed representation of mallee structure while the the processing time is longer compared to a larger voxel size. While a larger voxel size produces blobs while the processing speed is shorter. The results from the voxel neighbourhood connectivity represent a stronger voxel connectivity of 26-connected voxels suitable for heathland modelling rather than a 6-connected voxels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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41. Predicted scarcity of suitable habitat for alpine plant communities in northern Japan under climate change.
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Yukihiro Amagai, Hiroyuki Oguma, and Fumiko Ishihama
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PLANT habitats , *CLIMATE change , *PLANT communities , *MOUNTAIN plants , *TAIGAS , *HEATHLANDS , *HABITATS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Question: Alpine vegetation is sensitive to climate change, with shifts in species ranges, changes in community composition, and an upward shift in the forest limit over decades. Under climate change, habitats suitable for alpine vegetation will progressively decrease in scale, making their protection and conservation particularly important. In the Taisetsu Mountains of Japan, alpine vegetation has changed remarkably during the last decade. The aim of this study was to estimate the distribution of habitats suitable for alpine and subalpine vegetation types (snowbeds, shrubs, and alpine heathland/fellfield) and competing vegetation types (Sasa spp. and subarctic forest), while considering uncertainties in future predictions and climate scenarios. Location: Taisetsu Mountains, Daisetsuzan National Park, Hokkaido (northern Japan). Methods: We estimated the habitat area suitable for each vegetation type from current vegetation maps on the basis of the predictions by three global climate models (GCMs) under two climate change scenarios (RCP2.6 and RCP8.5) using five habitat suitability models (HSMs) in two periods (2046-2050 and 2096-2100). We also compared the performances of the HSMs. Results: Mean summer temperature and snow-cover period had significant effects on the distribution of all vegetation types. The estimated distribution area for suitable habitat did not differ markedly among GCMs and HSMs. Under the RCP2.6 scenario, habitats suitable for snowbeds and alpine heathland/fellfield drastically decreased overall but were preserved in some regions. Under the RCP8.5 scenario, however, subarctic forest almost completely replaced alpine and subalpine vegetation types over time. Conclusions: Our projections indicate that the severity of future climate change will determine whether or not habitats suitable for alpine vegetation will remain. Monitoring the dynamics of endemic and rare species for the effects of global warming should be the priority for adaptation strategies to enable timely conservation measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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42. Millennial land use explains modern high‐elevation vegetation in the submediterranean mountains of Southern Europe.
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Morales‐Molino, César, Leunda, Maria, Morellón, Mario, Gardoki, Jon, Ezquerra, F. Javier, Muñoz Sobrino, Castor, Rubiales, Juan M., and Tinner, Willy
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- *
MOUNTAIN plants , *LAND use , *LITTLE Ice Age , *SCOTS pine , *MOUNTAIN meadows - Abstract
Aim: Pinewood decline and scrubland expansion are major features of Late Holocene vegetation history in the Cantabrian Range. However, the drivers of this remarkable vegetation shift remain to be investigated. Here, we aim at disentangling the role of past land use and climate in shaping the high‐elevation Cantabrian landscape during the past two millennia. Location: Cantabrian Range (northern Iberia). Taxa: Pinus sylvestris, Betula, Ericaceae, Juniperus, Poaceae. Methods: We conducted high‐resolution multiproxy palaeoecological analyses (pollen, plant macrofossils, microscopic charcoal and dung fungi) on lake sediments from Lago del Ausente to reconstruct vegetation, fire occurrence and grazing through time. The chronology is based on 14C (terrestrial plant macrofossils) and 210Pb dating, and Bayesian age‐depth modelling ('rbacon'). We carried out cross‐correlation analysis to quantify vegetation responses to fire. Results: Between 250 and 900 CE, the vegetation above 1700 m a.s.l. consisted of subalpine scrubland and scattered P. sylvestris trees/stands. Pinewoods with Betula were widespread at slightly lower elevation. This vegetation was resilient to moderate fire disturbance associated with limited pastoral activities. In contrast, enhanced fire occurrence alongside heavier pastoralism led to the demise of pinewoods and their replacement with Betula stands, subalpine scrublands, and meadows between 900 and 1100 CE. Later, the subalpine scrubland‐birch tree line did not respond to Little Ice Age cooling. However, further intensification of transhumant herding between 1300 and 1860 CE ('La Mesta') triggered birch decline and the establishment of the modern treeless landscape. Main conclusions The extant high‐elevation vegetation of the Cantabrian Range is largely the legacy of intensive land use starting more than one millennium ago. Recurrent and severe fires to promote pasturelands led to the regional extirpation of the previously widespread Pinus sylvestris. Future management should aim at preserving the valuable cultural open landscape of mountain scrubland and meadows and also at restoring patches of ancient pine‐birch woodlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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43. Fire‐related threats and transformational change in Australian ecosystems.
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Keith, David A., Allen, Stuart P., Gallagher, Rachael V., Mackenzie, Berin D. E., Auld, Tony D., Barrett, Sarah, Buchan, Anne, English, Valerie, Gosper, Carl, Kelly, Dave, McIllwee, Allen, Melrose, Rachel T., Miller, Ben P., Neldner, V. John, Simpson, Christopher C., Tolsma, Arn D., Rogers, Daniel, van Leeuwen, Stephen, White, Matthew D., and Yates, Colin J.
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- *
FOREST fire ecology , *FIRE management , *ENDANGERED ecosystems , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *RAIN forests , *ECOSYSTEMS , *HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Aim: Megafire events generate immediate concern for wildlife and human well‐being, but their broader ecological impacts likely extend beyond individual species and single fire events. In the first mechanistic study of fire effects focussed on ecosystems, we aimed to assess the sensitivity and exposure of ecosystems to multiple fire‐related threats, placing impacts in the context of changing fire regimes and their interactions with other threats. Location: Southern and eastern Australia. Time period: 2019–2020. Major species studied: Australian ecosystems. Methods: We defined 15 fire‐related threats to ecosystems based on mechanisms associated with: (a) direct effects of fire regime components; (b) interactions between fire and physical environmental processes; (c) effects of fire on biological interactions; and (d) interactions between fire and human activity. We estimated the sensitivity and exposure of a sample of 92 ecosystem types to each threat type based on published relationships and spatial analysis of the 2019–2020 fires. Results: Twenty‐nine ecosystem types assessed had more than half of their distribution exposed to one or more threat types, and only three of those were listed as nationally threatened. Three fire‐related threat types posed the most severe threats to large numbers of ecosystem types: high frequency fire; pre‐fire drought; and post‐fire invasive predator activity. The ecosystem types most affected ranged from rain forests to peatlands, and included some, such as sclerophyllous eucalypt forests and heathlands, that are traditionally regarded as fire‐prone and fire‐adapted. Main conclusions: Most impacts of the 2019–2020 fires on ecosystems became apparent only when they were placed in the context of the whole fire regime and its interactions with other threatening processes, and were not direct consequences of the megafire event itself. Our mechanistic approach enables ecosystem‐specific management responses for the most threatened ecosystem types to be targeted at underlying causes of degradation and decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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44. Habitat selection of black grouse in an isolated population in northern Germany--the importance of mixing dry and wet habitats.
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Tost, Daniel, Ludwig, Tobias, Strauss, Egbert, Jung, Klaus, and Siebert, Ursula
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BLACK grouse ,HABITAT selection ,HABITATS ,BIRD banding ,NATURE reserves ,GROUSE ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Wildlife habitats in general must provide foraging, hiding and resting places as well as sites for reproduction. Little is known about habitat selection of black grouse in the lowlands of Central Europe. We investigated habitat selection of seven radio tagged birds in an open heath and grassland area surrounded by dense pine forests in the northern German Lüneburg Heath Nature Reserve. This site carries one of the last remaining populations in the Central European lowlands. Using resource selection functions based on presence/background data, we estimated the probability of black grouse occurrence by availability of, or distance to habitat types as well as vegetation diversity indices. Black grouse preferred undisturbed and heterogeneous habitats far from dense forests with wide sand heaths, natural grasslands and intermixed bogs, diverse vegetation and food sources, low density of (loose) shrub formations and solitary trees. Wetlands were extremely important in a landscape that is dominated by dry heaths and grasslands. About 4% (9 km²) of the nature reserve was a suitable habitat for black grouse, mostly due to lack of open areas due to the amount of dense forest, and because smaller, open heaths are only partly suitable. We suggest that to improve habitat quality and quantity for the grouse, habitat patch size and connectivity must be increased, along with a mosaic of heterogeneous landscape structures in these habitat islands. Our results may be used to inform and improve black grouse habitat management in the region and elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Long-Term Drought and Warming Alter Soil Bacterial and Fungal Communities in an Upland Heathland.
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Seaton, Fiona M., Reinsch, Sabine, Goodall, Tim, White, Nicola, Jones, Davey L., Griffiths, Robert I., Creer, Simon, Smith, Andy, Emmett, Bridget A., and Robinson, David A.
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- *
HEATHLANDS , *SOIL heating , *FUNGAL communities , *BACTERIAL communities , *BIOGEOCHEMICAL cycles , *FUNGAL colonies , *MICROBIAL communities , *TOPSOIL - Abstract
The response of soil microbial communities to a changing climate will impact global biogeochemical cycles, potentially leading to positive and negative feedbacks. However, our understanding of how soil microbial communities respond to climate change and the implications of these changes for future soil function is limited. Here, we assess the response of soil bacterial and fungal communities to long-term experimental climate change in a heathland organo-mineral soil. We analysed microbial communities using Illumina sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene and ITS2 region at two depths, from plots undergoing 4 and 18 years of in situ summer drought or warming. We also assessed the colonisation of Calluna vulgaris roots by ericoid and dark septate endophytic (DSE) fungi using microscopy after 16 years of climate treatment. We found significant changes in both the bacterial and fungal communities in response to drought and warming, likely mediated by changes in soil pH and electrical conductivity. Changes in the microbial communities were more pronounced after a longer period of climate manipulation. Additionally, the subsoil communities of the long-term warmed plots became similar to the topsoil. Ericoid mycorrhizal colonisation decreased with depth while DSEs increased; however, these trends with depth were removed by warming. We largely ascribe the observed changes in microbial communities to shifts in plant cover and subsequent feedback on soil physicochemical properties, especially pH. Our results demonstrate the importance of considering changes in soil microbial responses to climate change across different soil depths and after extended periods of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. Mapping edaphic soils' conditions to identify conservation targets for pine barren and sandplain ecosystems in New York State.
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Corbin, Jeffrey D. and Flatland, Emma L.
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- *
SOIL mapping , *ECOSYSTEMS , *PINE , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *SANDY soils , *GRASSLAND soils , *FORESTED wetlands - Abstract
Small habitat patches can be important reservoirs for biodiversity, capable of hosting unique species that are largely absent from the surrounding landscape. In cases where such patches owe their existence to the presence of particular soil types or hydrologic conditions, local‐scale edaphic variables may be more effective components for models that identify patch location than regional‐scale macroclimatic variables often used in habitat and species distribution models. We modeled the edaphic soil conditions that support pine barren, sandplain, and related ecosystems in New York State with the purpose of identifying potential locations for biodiversity conservation. We quantified soil percent sand and soil depth of 156 known high‐quality remnant pine barren and sandplain ecosystems to calculate threshold soil characteristics. We then mapped all soils in the state that were at least as sandy and deep as the threshold values we calculated. The total area of our map of suitable soil conditions was over 9500 km2, made up of forested (57%), urban (26%), agricultural (13%), and open (4%) land covers. Our analysis nearly doubled the recognized area of barren, shrubland, and grassland habitat on deep, sandy soils in New York State. Extensive forested and even agricultural cover on these soils could also be the subject of restoration to further support the biodiversity of these unique ecosystems. The presence of extensive soils in coastal and interior New York that, with the appropriate disturbance regime, have the potential to host pine barren and sandplain ecosystems offers a new perspective on these ecosystems' distribution in the past—and about how to better align conservation and restoration to preserve the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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47. Contribution to the knowledge of Carabus species (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in South Denmark.
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Peeters, Ief (Yves)
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CARABUS , *GROUND beetles , *HABITATS , *HEATHLANDS , *SANDY soils - Abstract
The author reports the presence of several Carabus species found in South Denmark in July 2021. Apart from specific species information, the habitats are also briefly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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48. Eucalypt Recruitment and Invasion Potential in Protected Areas of the Iberian Peninsula under Current and Future Climate Conditions.
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Deus, Ernesto, Silva, Joaquim S., Vicente, Joana R., and Catry, Filipe X.
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PROTECTED areas ,EUCALYPTUS ,RIPARIAN forests ,EUCALYPTUS globulus ,PENINSULAS ,CLIMATE change ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Eucalyptus globulus Labill. stands have been expanding in protected areas (sites) of the Natura 2000 network in the Iberian Peninsula (Iberia). This expansion is mostly human-driven, but there is increasing evidence of plant recruitment and escape from cultivation areas. Therefore, it is important to assess the recruitment and invasion potential of sites and associated habitats and how future climate may change this potential. Here, we use SDMs to project current and future climatic suitability for E. globulus recruitment in Iberia and combine this suitability with local factors to rate the current recruitment potential of eucalypt stands. This potential is then extrapolated to neighbour areas in Natura 2000 sites to assess the invasion potential. The results show a wide recruitment range along coastal regions of western and northern Iberia (83,275 km
2 ) and a northward contraction under climate change, similar to the trend projected for plantation suitability. Recruitment potential of any level was identified in 989 km2 , while invasion potential was identified in 878 km2 across 176 Natura 2000 sites. Heathlands and riparian forests were associated with the largest recruitment and invasion potential areas. This study may help in preventing further negative impacts in protected areas and habitats already affected by E. globulus expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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49. Bracken-induced increase in soil P availability, along with its high P acquisition efficiency, enables it to invade P-deficient meadows.
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Jelinčić, Antun, Šajna, Nina, Zgorelec, Željka, and Perčin, Aleksandra
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MEADOWS ,SOILS ,SOIL chemistry ,PHYSIOLOGY ,HEATHLANDS - Abstract
Changes in soil chemistry after invasion by bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) have been studied in heathlands, but comparable studies in meadows are lacking. We investigated if bracken invasion into P-deficient meadows alters the soil nutrient-resource pool, as well as the mechanisms behind it linked to soil processes and bracken nutrition. Furthermore, we investigated how community composition responds to differences in soil chemistry before and after the invasion. Soil and plant material sampling, along with vegetation survey, were performed during bracken peak biomass. Data analyses included analysis of variance and canonical correspondence analysis (CCA). Bracken invasion increased soil P availability, soil organic C concentration, as well as C:N, C:S and N:S ratios, while decreasing Fe and Co concentrations. Bracken pinnae were rich in P, and its rhizomes were rich in K, whereas N:P of pinnae and rhizomes was low. CCA showed contrasting abundance patterns of frequent meadow species related to P and K availability. Holcus lanatus exhibited competitive advantage under extremely low P availability. Increase in P availability under bracken may have occurred through promoting the leaching of Fe and Al. By increasing P availability for its growth and increasing N limitation for other species, bracken can gain a competitive advantage from the soil resource-niche perspective. Its ability to increase soil P availability, along with the physiological mechanisms behind its high P acquisition efficiency, seem to differentiate bracken from other species of competitive ecological strategy, which are mainly confined to nutrient-rich environments. This enabled bracken to invade P-deficient meadows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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50. Employing plant translocations to restore open dry acidic habitats in European Continental lowlands: A case study in northern Italy.
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Assini, Silvia, Gressani, Alessia, Barcella, Matteo, Bacchetta, Alice, Brugellis, Ilaria, Tarzariol, Giulia, Nascimbene, Juri, and Gheza, Gabriele
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PLANT habitats ,PLANT translocation ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,HEATHLANDS ,PLANT performance - Abstract
Open dry acidic habitats protected under the Natura 2000 Network (Council Directive 92/43/EEC) occur in Italian Continental lowlands with an either poor or bad conservation status. The LIFE Drylands project was designed with the aim of restoring these habitats in the western Po Plain. In the context of this project, we translocated plants typical of habitat 4030 "European dry heaths" and of the acidophilous subtype of habitat 6210 "Semi-natural dry grasslands and scrubland facies on calcareous substrates (Festuco-Brometalia) (* important orchid sites)" in two sites hosting them. We assessed the outcome of the translocations by monitoring survival, flowering, and fruiting rates of the translocated plants during either the first or the second year following the translocation. We compared plants' performances by a one-way analysis of variance and then cross-referenced them with literature data. Based on our results, we suggest that a mix of hemicryptophytes, such as Armeria arenaria , Betonica officinalis , Dianthus carthusianorum and Festuca filiformis , and geophytes, like Anthericum liliago and Limniris sibirca , with a density of about 34 plants/m
2 could be used for other translocations in dry heathlands and dry grasslands in the European Continental biogeographical region, while the addition of therophytes needs further evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
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