PATTERNS AND CAUSES OF RESISTANCE TO TREE INVASION IN RIGHTS-OF-WAY
Authored by CD Canham, JD HILL, DM WOOD
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.2307/1942036
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust
Empire State Electric Energy Research Corporation
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
This study was designed to identify the critical life-history stages and
ecological processes responsible for variation in rates of tree invasion
in utility rights-of-way in the Hudson Valley of New York. We used
repeated censuses to estimate natural rates of tree seedling
establishment, growth, and survival in the 12 major plant communities
found along rights-of-way in the region. An individual-based model was
used to integrate our field data and calculate measures of the rate of
tree invasion in each plant community. The most common tree invaders
were species with large, wind-dispersed seeds (i.e., Acer rubrum and
Fraxinus americana) although these were rarely the most common tree
species in the forests bordering the corridors. In narrow (approximate
to 30-50 m wide) rights-of-way there was little relationship between
seedling density and distance to the nearest seed sources; however, in
wide corridors, seed dispersal clearly limited tree invasion. Annual
variation in seed production in adjacent forests was also a major factor
in the high spatial and temporal variability in tree seedling
establishment. Growth rates of newly established seedlings did not vary
significantly among the different communities; however, seedling growth
rates increased dramatically once the seedlings emerged above shrub or
herb-dominated canopy. Thus, the duration of competition (i.e., the
number of years required by a seedling to emerge above the shrub or
herbaceous canopy) appears to have been more important than the initial
intensity of competition in determining variation among communities in
resistance to tree invasion. As a result, shrub communities generally
had high resistance to invasion. Among herbaceous communities, the
highest resistance to invasion occurred in communities dominated by the
grass Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem) on poor soils.
Tags
Community
Mechanisms
Colonization
Establishment
New-york
Herbivores
Plant succession
Seedling emergence
Relatively stable shrublands
Old-field succession