Secondary edge effects in regenerating forest landscapes: vegetation and microclimate patterns and their implications for management and conservation

被引:42
|
作者
Dovciak, Martin [1 ]
Brown, Jordan [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA
[2] Univ Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
关键词
Biodiversity conservation; Forest edge dynamics; Forest regeneration; Thickets; DOUGLAS-FIR FORESTS; NORTHERN HARDWOOD FOREST; TO-INTERIOR GRADIENTS; CLEAR-CUT EDGES; STRUCTURAL RETENTION; OVERSTORY RETENTION; WESTERN WASHINGTON; TROPICAL FOREST; RESPONSES; FRAGMENTS;
D O I
10.1007/s11056-014-9419-7
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Forest regrowth is expected to gradually mitigate edge effects in forest landscapes fragmented by timber harvest, but our understanding of edge effect persistence and dynamics over time is still incomplete. Our main objective was to take a critical look at the role of forest regrowth in mitigating the initial edge effects on microclimate and understory vegetation in northern hardwood forests of the eastern United States. We compared canopy closure, hourly air temperature, soil moisture, and understory vegetation at increasing distances from forest edges (0, 5, 10, 20, and 30 m) along twelve transects placed across new and older forest edges (3-4 or 16-19 years old) created by forest harvest. Open, new forest edges exhibited pronounced edge effects on microclimate and shade-intolerant plants, but these were almost completely moderated by forest regrowth on the cleared side of older edges where dense young forest developed with a new canopy comparable in cover to adjacent mature forest. There were no initial edge effects on shade-tolerant vegetation across new forest edges, but the shade-tolerant vegetation declined in mature forest near old forest edges adjacent to dense young forest that supported only sparse understory vegetation. These delayed secondary edge effects of young dense forests on adjacent mature forests have not been previously documented and they should be more explicitly included in forest management considerations. We suggest an integrated system for managing and mitigating both the immediate primary and delayed secondary edge effects in those working forest landscapes where biodiversity conservation is of high priority.
引用
收藏
页码:733 / 744
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Living on the edge: forest edge effects on microclimate and terrestrial mammal activity in disturbed lowland forest in Sumatra, Indonesia
    Slater, Helen D.
    Gillingham, Phillipa K.
    Pratt, Victoria
    Eaton, Ben
    Fletcher, Simon
    Abdullah, Abdullah
    Supriadi
    Korstjens, Amanda H.
    ORYX, 2024, 58 (02) : 228 - 239
  • [22] Edge Effects Disrupt Vertical Stratification of Microclimate in a Temperate Forest Canopy
    Didham, Raphael K.
    Ewers, Robert M.
    PACIFIC SCIENCE, 2014, 68 (04) : 493 - 508
  • [23] Headwater riparian microclimate patterns under alternative forest management treatments
    Rykken, Jessica J.
    Chan, Samuel S.
    Moldenke, Andrew R.
    FOREST SCIENCE, 2007, 53 (02) : 270 - 280
  • [24] Salvage logging, edge effects, and carabid beetles: Connections to conservation and sustainable forest management
    Phillips, Iain D.
    Cobb, Tyler P.
    Spence, John R.
    Brigham, R. Mark
    ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 2006, 35 (04) : 950 - 957
  • [25] Patterns of organisation in changing landscapes: implications for the management of biodiversity
    Ernoult, A
    Bureau, F
    Poudevigne, I
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2003, 18 (03) : 239 - 251
  • [26] Bioindicators of edge effects within Atlantic Forest remnants: Conservation implications in a threatened biodiversity hotspot
    de la Sancha, Noe U.
    Gonzalez-Maya, Jose F.
    Boyle, Sarah A.
    Perez-Estigarribia, Pastor E.
    Urbina-Cardona, J. Nicolas
    McIntyre, Nancy E.
    DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, 2023, 29 (03) : 349 - 363
  • [27] Patterns of organisation in changing landscapes: implications for the management of biodiversity
    Aude Ernoult
    Fabrice Bureau
    Isabelle Poudevigne
    Landscape Ecology, 2003, 18 : 239 - 251
  • [28] EDGE EFFECTS IN FRAGMENTED FORESTS - IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATION
    MURCIA, C
    TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 1995, 10 (02) : 58 - 62
  • [29] The Atlantic Forest of South America: Spatiotemporal dynamics of the vegetation and implications for conservation
    Vancine, Mauricio Humberto
    Muylaert, Renata L.
    Niebuhr, Bernardo Branda
    Oshima, Julia Emi de Faria
    Tonetti, Vinicius
    Bernardo, Rodrigo
    De Angelo, Carlos
    Rosa, Marcos Reis
    Grohmann, Carlos Henrique
    Ribeiro, Milton Cezar
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2024, 291
  • [30] Patterns of forest vegetation responses to edge effect as revealed by a continuous approach
    Audrey Alignier
    Marc Deconchat
    Annals of Forest Science, 2013, 70 : 601 - 609