Community organization of tree species along soil gradients in a north-eastern USA forest

被引:94
|
作者
Bigelow, SW [1 ]
Canham, CD [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Ecosyst Studies, Box AB,65 Sharon Turnpike, Millbrook, NY 12545 USA
关键词
continuum concept; fundamental niche differentiation; northern hardwood forest; shifting competitive hierarchy; soil calcium; soil-species relationship;
D O I
10.1046/j.0022-0477.2001.00655.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
1 A study was carried out in oak-northern hardwood forest in NW Connecticut USA involving measurements of growth, light and soil environment of saplings of six canopy trees that are strongly associated with particular soil types as adults. The objectives were to determine patterns of growth response along soil factor gradients, and to discriminate among modes of community organization (fundamental niche differentiation, shifting competitive hierarchy or continuum concept). 2 Relationships were found between tree species distributions and all measured soil factors (pH and exchangeable calcium, magnesium, potassium, aluminium, ammonium and nitrate). 3 Growth and light data were fitted to a nested series of functions based on the Michaelis-Menten equation. For five of six species, likelihood-ratio tests indicated that functions that incorporated pH or other soil factors predicted growth better than functions based only on light availability. 4 Species differed in the direction and strength of response to soil factors, Fraxinus americana had decreased growth on high-magnesium soils, Acer rubrum had increased growth on high-aluminium soils, Quercus rubra and Fagus grandifolia had increased growth on high-calcium soils and Tsuga canadensis had increased growth on high-nitrate soils. 5 Growth responses were consistent with either fundamental niche differentiation and continuum concept (Acer rubrum), shifting competitive hierarchy and continuum concept (Fagus grandifolia, Quercus rubra and Tsuga canadensis) or were not consistent with any theory (Acer saccharum and Fraxinus americana). 6 Because saplings are associated with the same soil-types as mature trees, further studies in this system should focus on earlier stages of the plant life cycle: dispersal, germination and seedling establishment.
引用
收藏
页码:188 / 200
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] TREE SPECIES DIVERSITY IN EASTERN DECIDUOUS FOREST WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO NORTH CENTRAL FLORIDA
    MONK, CD
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1967, 101 (918): : 173 - &
  • [42] Soil acidification and the carbon cycle in a cropping soil of north-eastern Victoria
    Slattery, WJ
    Edwards, DG
    Bell, LC
    Coventry, DR
    Helyar, KR
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL RESEARCH, 1998, 36 (02): : 273 - 290
  • [43] Effect of Tree Diversity on Soil Organic Carbon Content in the Homegarden Agroforestry System of North-Eastern Bangladesh
    Islam, Mahmuda
    Dey, Anna
    Rahman, Mizanur
    SMALL-SCALE FORESTRY, 2015, 14 (01) : 91 - 101
  • [44] Effect of Tree Diversity on Soil Organic Carbon Content in the Homegarden Agroforestry System of North-Eastern Bangladesh
    Mahmuda Islam
    Anna Dey
    Mizanur Rahman
    Small-scale Forestry, 2015, 14 : 91 - 101
  • [45] Tree species distribution along soil catenas in a riverside semideciduous forest in southeastern Brazil
    Oliveira, AT
    Curi, N
    Vilela, EA
    Carvalho, DA
    FLORA, 1997, 192 (01) : 47 - 64
  • [46] Forest floor chemistry under seven tree species along a soil fertility gradient
    Vesterdal, L
    Raulund-Rasmussen, K
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 1998, 28 (11) : 1636 - 1647
  • [47] Salient features and ecosystem services of tree species in mountainous indigenous agroforestry systems of North-Eastern Tanzania
    Kimaro, Oforo Didas
    Desie, Ellen
    Kimaro, Didas Nahum
    Vancampenhout, Karen
    Feger, Karl-Heinz
    FRONTIERS IN FORESTS AND GLOBAL CHANGE, 2024, 6
  • [48] Ant community organization along elevational gradients in a temperate ecosystem
    A. Bernadou
    X. Espadaler
    A. Le Goff
    V. Fourcassié
    Insectes Sociaux, 2015, 62 : 59 - 71
  • [49] Ant community organization along elevational gradients in a temperate ecosystem
    Bernadou, A.
    Espadaler, X.
    Le Goff, A.
    Fourcassie, V.
    INSECTES SOCIAUX, 2015, 62 (01) : 59 - 71
  • [50] Prediction of episodic acidification in North-eastern USA: an empirical mechanistic approach
    Davies, TD
    Tranter, M
    Wigington, PJ
    Eshleman, KN
    Peters, NE
    Van Sickle, J
    DeWalle, DR
    Murdoch, PS
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 1999, 13 (08) : 1181 - 1195