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首页> 外文期刊>Biotropica >Interactions of Fire and Nonnative Species Across an Elevation/Plant Community Gradient in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
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Interactions of Fire and Nonnative Species Across an Elevation/Plant Community Gradient in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

机译:夏威夷火山国家公园内海拔/植物群落梯度上火种与外来物种的相互作用

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摘要

ABSTRACTInvasive species interacting with fires pose a relatively unknown, but potentially serious, threat to the tropical forests of Hawaii. Fires may create conditions that facilitate species invasions, but the degree to which this occurs in different tropical plant communities has not been quantified. We documented the survival and establishment of plant species for 2 yr following 2003 wildfires in tropical moist and wet forest life zones in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii. Fires were ignited by lava flows and burned across a steep environmental gradient encompassing two previously burned shrub-dominated communities and three Metrosideros polymorpha forest communities. Fires in all community types were stand replacing, where >95 percent of overstory trees were top killed. Over half (>57%) of the trees survived via basal sprouting, but sprout growth differed among forest communities. Sprout growth (>250,000 cm3) was greatest in the forest community where postfire understory cover was lowest presumably due to thick native Dicranopteris linearis fern litter that remained postfire. In contrast, M. polymorpha sprout growth was much slower (<100,000 cm3) in the two forest communities where there was rapid understory recovery of nonnative ferns Nephrolepis multiflora and invasive grasses Paspalum conjugatum. These results suggest that the rapid establishment of an invasive-dominated understory limited recovery of the overstory dominant M. polymorpha. In contrast to the three forest communities, there were few changes in vegetation composition in the shrubland communities. Nonnative species invasions coupled with repeated fires selectively eliminated fire-sensitive species thereby maintaining these communities in dominance of primarily nonnative, fire-resilient, species.
机译:摘要与火相互作用的入侵物种对夏威夷的热带森林构成了一个相对未知但潜在的严重威胁。火灾可能创造有利于物种入侵的条件,但是在不同的热带植物群落中发生这种火灾的程度尚未量化。我们记录了2003年夏威夷夏威夷火山国家公园的热带潮湿和湿润森林生活区发生野火后2年植物物种的生存和建立。熔岩流点燃了大火,并在一个陡峭的环境梯度上燃烧,该梯度包括两个以前烧毁的灌木为主的社区和三个多叶都市宽叶林社区。所有社区类型的大火都在取代,超过95%的树木被杀死。超过一半(> 57%)的树木通过基础发芽而得以存活,但是森林社区之间的发芽生长有所不同。在森林社区,发芽后的生长(> 250,000 cm 3 )最大,据推测,这是由于火后仍保留着厚厚的原生Dicranopteris linearis蕨类凋落物,导致火后林下覆盖率最低。相比之下,在两个森林群落中,多形分支杆菌的新芽生长要慢得多(<100,000 cm 3 ),那里的非原生蕨类植物Nephrolepis multiflora和入侵草Paspalum conjugatum的林下快速恢复。这些结果表明,以侵入为主的林下层的快速建立限制了层上显性多形支原体的恢复。与这三个森林群落相反,灌木丛群落的植被组成几乎没有变化。非本地物种的入侵加上反复发生的火灾有选择地消除了对火敏感的物种,从而使这些群落在主要非本地,具有防火能力的物种中占主导地位。

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