FOREST FRAGMENTATION AND ALIEN PLANT INVASION OF CENTRAL INDIANA OLD-GROWTH FORESTS

被引:318
作者
BROTHERS, TS
SPINGARN, A
机构
[1] Department of Geography, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana
[2] Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Nature Preserves, Indianapolis, Indiana
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1992.610091.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
We assessed alien plant invasion of old-growth forest islands in rural central Indiana by means of paired sample sites along "warm" (south and west) edges and "cool" (north and east) edges in each of seven forest remnants. In general, the fragments appeared resistant to alien invasion; alien species richness and frequency dropped sharply inward from forest edges, and forest interiors were relatively free of aliens. However, aliens were more diverse and more frequent on warm edges than on cool ones. The main factor limiting invasion is probably low light availability in forest interiors, though limited dispersal and low disturbance levels may also be important. We suggest that invasion is discouraged by the edge response of the forests themselves: development of a dense wall of bordering vegetation that reduces interior light levels and wind speeds. The most successful invaders are mostly escaped ornamentals or other species not commonly found in adjoining fields. They can be expected to become more prominent in the future, but their spread at the landscape scale may be slowed by the "oceans" of cropland surrounding these forest islands.
引用
收藏
页码:91 / 100
页数:10
相关论文
共 38 条
  • [1] Alverson W.S., Waller D.M., Solheim S.L., Forests too deer: edge effects in northern Wisconsin, Conservation Biology, 2, pp. 348-358, (1988)
  • [2] Blackman G.E., Wilson G.L., Physiological and ecological studies in the analysis of plant environment VI. The constancy for different species of a logarithmic relationship between net assimilation rate and light intensity and its ecological significance, Annals of Botany, N.S., 57, pp. 63-94, (1951)
  • [3] Braun E.L., Deciduous forests of eastern North America, (1950)
  • [4] Cavers P.B., Heagy M.I., Kokron R.F., The biology of Canadian weeds. 35. Alliaria petiolata (M. Bieb.) Cavara and Grande, Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 59, pp. 217-229, (1979)
  • [5] Cid-Benevento C.R., Distributional limits of old‐field and woodland annual herbs: the relative importance of seed availability and interference from herbaceous vegetation, American Midland Naturalist, 117, pp. 296-306, (1987)
  • [6] Cross J.R., Biological flora of the British Isles. Rhododendron ponticum L, The Journal of Ecology, 63, pp. 345-364, (1975)
  • [7] Curtis J.T., The modification of mid‐latitude grasslands and forests by man, Man's role in changing the face of the Earth, pp. 721-736, (1956)
  • [8] Deam C.C., Flora of Indiana, (1940)
  • [9] Gleason H.A., The new Britton and Brown illustrated flora of the northeastern United States and adjacent Canada, 3, (1963)
  • [10] Grime J.P., Shade tolerance in flowering plants, Nature, 208, pp. 161-163, (1965)