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Land-use history, historical connectivity, and land management interact to determine longleaf pine woodland understory richness and composition

机译:土地使用历史,历史联系和土地管理相互影响,以确定长叶松树林的林下丰富度和组成

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Restoration and management activities targeted at recovering biodiversity can lead to unexpected results. In part, this is due to a lack of understanding of how site-level characteristics, landscape factors, and land-use history interact with restoration and management practices to determine patterns of diversity. For plants, such factors may be particularly important since plant populations often exhibit lagged responses to habitat loss and degradation. Here, we assess the importance of site-level, landscape, and historical effects for understory plant species richness and composition across a set of 40 longleaf pine Pinus palustris woodlands undergoing restoration for the federally endangered red-cockaded woodpecker in the southeastern United States. Land-use history had an overarching effect on richness and composition. Relative to historically forested sites, sites with agricultural histories (i.e. former pastures or cultivated fields) supported lower species richness and an altered species composition due to fewer upland longleaf pine woodland community members. Landscape effects did not influence the total number of species in either historically forested or post-agricultural sites; however, understory species composition was affected by historical connectivity, but only for post-agricultural sites. The influences of management and restoration activities were only apparent once land-use history was accounted for. Prescribed burning and mechanical overstory thinning were key drivers of understory composition and promoted understory richness in post-agricultural sites. In historically forested sites these activities had no impact on richness and only prescribed fire influenced composition. Our findings reveal complex interplays between site-level, landscape, and historical effects, suggest fundamentally different controls over plant communities in longleaf pine woodlands with varying land-use history, and underscore the importance of considering land-use history and landscape effects during restoration.
机译:旨在恢复生物多样性的恢复和管理活动可能会导致意想不到的结果。在某种程度上,这是由于缺乏对站点级别特征,景观因素和土地使用历史与恢复和管理实践如何相互作用以确定多样性模式的了解。对于植物而言,这些因素可能尤其重要,因为植物种群通常对生境丧失和退化表现出滞后的反应。在这里,我们评估了地点范围,景观和历史影响对于40片长叶松柏松林地中的林下植物物种丰富度和组成的重要性,这些长叶松林正在接受美国东南部联邦濒临灭绝的红冠啄木鸟的修复。土地使用历史对丰富性和构成产生了总体影响。相对于历史悠久的森林地点,具有农业历史的地点(即以前的牧场或耕地)支持较低的物种丰富度,并且由于旱地长叶松林地社区成员较少,物种种类也发生了变化。景观影响不影响历史悠久的森林或农业后地点的物种总数;然而,林下物种的组成受到历史连通性的影响,但仅限于农业后遗址。管理和恢复活动的影响只有在考虑了土地使用历史后才显而易见。规定的焚烧和机械上层减薄是下层农业构成的主要驱动力,并促进了后农业用地的下层丰富性。在历史悠久的林地中,这些活动对丰富度没有影响,只有受明火影响的成分。我们的发现揭示了场地水平,景观和历史影响之间的复杂相互作用,表明对长叶松树林的植物群落具有根本不同的控制,土地使用历史各不相同,并强调了在恢复过程中考虑土地使用历史和景观影响的重要性。

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