Journal Article10.1007/S11258-010-9771-4
Invasion by native tree species prevents biotic homogenization in novel forests of Puerto Rico
TL;DR: The S. campanulata forests of Puerto Rico facilitate native tree species establishment in lands where poor management practices extirpated the original forest and highlight the importance of remnant old growth forests or trees that act as seed dispersal sources and facilitate native species recovery in novel forests.
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Abstract: There is concern that secondary forests dominated by introduced species, known as novel forests, increase taxonomical similarity between localities and lead to biotic homogenization in human-dominated landscapes. In Puerto Rico, agricultural abandonment has given way to novel forests dominated by the introduced African tulip tree Spathodea campanulata Beauv. (Bignoniaceae). In this study, I characterized the tree species composition of S. campanulata forests in Puerto Rico as means to evaluate if biotic homogenization is occurring. Non-metric multidimensional scaling was used to examine what variables were related to the large (≥10 cm diameter at breast height [DBH]), small (≥2.5 to <10 cm DBH), and juvenile (<2.5 cm DBH) tree species composition of 20 sites. Species composition was strongly related to substrate properties, less related to land use history, and unrelated to spatial attributes. The introduced species component was low (mean = 17%, S.E. = 1.8) and compositional differences were mostly due to native tree species of secondary to old growth forests on equivalent substrates. Animals appear to disperse most species (86%) into these forests yet because of this some introduced species will persist. Although uncommon species were largely absent, recent species establishment is shaped by substrate properties making biotic homogenization in these forests unlikely. The S. campanulata forests of Puerto Rico facilitate native tree species establishment in lands where poor management practices extirpated the original forest. These results highlight the importance of remnant old growth forests or trees that act as seed dispersal sources and facilitate native species recovery in novel forests.
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Plant invasions in the landscape
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The rise of novelty in ecosystems.
Volker C. Radeloff,John W. Williams,Brooke L. Bateman,Kevin D. Burke,Sarah K. Carter,Evan S. Childress,Kara J. Cromwell,Claudio Gratton,Andrew Osborne Hasley,Benjamin M. Kraemer,Alexander W. Latzka,Erika Marin-Spiotta,Curt Meine,Samuel E. Munoz,Thomas M. Neeson,Anna M. Pidgeon,Adena R. Rissman,Ricardo J. Rivera,L. M. Szymanski,Jacob Usinowicz +19 more
TL;DR: A formal and quantifiable definition of abiotic and biotic novelty in ecosystems is proposed, a global assessment of novelty was based on abiotic factors plus human population, and shows that there are already large areas with high novelty today relative to the early 20th century, and that there will even be more such areas by 2050.
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Biotic homogenisation and differentiation as directional change in beta diversity: synthesising driver–response relationships to develop conceptual models across ecosystems
Robert J. Rolls,David C. Deane,Sarah E. Johnson,Jani Heino,Marti J. Anderson,Kari E. Ellingsen +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically reviewed and synthesised published empirical evidence for ecological drivers of biotic homogenisation and differentiation across terrestrial, marine, and freshwater realms to derive conceptual models that explain changes in spatial beta diversity.
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Novel tropical forests: nature's response to global change
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the conditions that lead to novel forest formation and the characteristics of these forests, including their species composition, and propose that these types of ecosystems might represent the natural response of the biota to the Anthropocene.
References
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Trees of Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands
Elbert L. Little,Roy O. Woodbury,Frank H. Wadsworth +2 more
- 01 Jan 1974
126
The Landscape Ecology of Tropical Secondary Forest in Montane Costa Rica
TL;DR: In this article, a multinomial logistic model of land use/land cover in Costa Rica and landscape pattern analysis showed that secondary forest occurred closer to old-growth forest, further from roads, in forest reserves, and at higher elevations.
103
Limited native plant regeneration in novel, exotic-dominated forests on Hawai’i
TL;DR: It is suggested that a wide diversity of growth strategies among the exotic species on Hawai’i may limit the opportunities for native plants to colonize exotic-dominated forests.
99