Revegetation in agricultural areas: the development of structural complexity and floristic diversity

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

Revegetation plantings have been established to ameliorate the negative effects of clearing remnant vegetation and to provide new habitat for fauna. We assessed the vegetation development of revegetation established on agricultural land in Gippsland, southeastern Australia. We compared (1) woodlot plantings (overstory eucalypts only) and (2) ecological plantings (many species of local trees, shrubs, and understory) with remnants and paddocks for development of vegetation structural complexity and colonizing plant species. We also assessed structural complexity and plant species composition in response to several site parameters. Structural complexity increased with age of planting, toward that of remnants, even when very few species were planted at establishment. Richness of all plants and native plants, however, did not increase with age. Native ground cover plants were not included at establishment in either planting type, and their richness also did not increase with age of planting. This indicated that colonization did not occur through time, which does not support the "foster ecosystem hypothesis." Weed species richness was unrelated to native plant richness, which does not support the "diversity-resistance hypothesis." Weed cover increased with age of planting in woodlot plantings but decreased with age in ecological plantings. Richness of all plants and native plants in plantings did not increase with planting size or with the presence of old remnant trees and was greater in gullies and where vegetation cover in the landscape was greater. Structural complexity was unaffected by planting size but was positively correlated with floristic richness. Ecological plantings had higher condition scores, greater shrub cover, more plant life-forms and fewer weeds than woodlot plantings indicating a possible greater benefit as habitat for wildlife. We conclude that ecological plantings can achieve similar overall structural complexity as remnant vegetation within 30-40 years but will not gain a native ground layer and will not necessarily contain some important structural features by this age. Ecological plantings may provide habitat for the conservation of fauna (through the development of structural complexity), but they may not provide for the conservation of non-planted flora (given the absence of re-colonizing smaller life-forms).

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftEcological Applications
Jahrgang19
Ausgabenummer5
Seiten (von - bis)1197-1210
Anzahl der Seiten14
ISSN1051-0761
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 07.2009
Extern publiziertJa

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. On anisotropic tensile mechanical behavior of Al-Cu-Li AA2198 alloy under different ageing conditions
  2. Narrative Ethik und Addressierung am Beispiel des Gleichnisses vom barmherzigen Samariter (Lk 10,30-35)
  3. Konzeption und Praxis des Nachhaltigkeitscontrollings: Ansatzpunkte in großen deutschen Unternehmen
  4. Foundations and applications of computer based material flow networks for einvironmental management
  5. Bildungsmaßnahmen für Ärzte und Pflegepersonal bezüglich Arzneimittelrückstände im Wasserkreislauf
  6. The recombinant bifunctional protein αCD133–GPVI promotes repair of the infarcted myocardium in mice
  7. The feeling thinking talking intervention with teachers advances young children's emotion knowledge
  8. Tagungsdokumentation 2018 - Perspektiven inklusiven Englischunterrichts: Gemeinsam lehren und lernen
  9. Performance analysis of a thermochemical based heat storage as an addition to cogeneration systems
  10. On the granularity of the German economy - first evidence from the top 100 companies panel database
  11. “I think they are irresponsible”: Teaching Sustainability with (Counter)Narratives in the EFL Classroom
  12. CONFLICTOS EN LA VISIÓN MATEMÁTICA DEL MUNDO Aún más retos para los futuros profesores de matemáticas
  13. Computational Study of Three-Dimensional Lagrangian Transport and Mixing in a Stirred Tank Reactor  
  14. Bridging senses of place and mobilities scholarships to inform social-ecological systems governance
  15. A framework for disentangling ecological mechanisms underlying the island species–area relationship
  16. Was Naturwissenschaftsdidaktiken und Religionspädagogik voneinander über Inklusion lernen können
  17. Sugars and amino acid composition in nectar of two plant species along a plant diversity gradient
  18. Spatial characterization of social-ecological systems units for management in Tropical Dry Forests
  19. Punitive Menschenrechte – Der Anspruch des Opfers auf Bestrafung im europäischen Grundrechtsgefüge
  20. Kunstkammer, Ostasiatische Weltkunst, Expressionistische Avantgarde neben Rokoko und Bauhaus-Moderne.
  21. Künste, Kultur und Künstler im Verständnis der Stadtentwicklung - eine vergleichende Stadtforschung
  22. In vivo degradability and biocompatibility of a rheo-formed Mg–Zn–Sr alloy for ureteral implantation
  23. How perfect is (too) perfect? Illuminating why the perfectionism-performance-relationship is (non-)linear
  24. Dataset of physiological, behavioral, and self-report measures from a group decision-making lab study
  25. Crisis-induced disruptions in place-based social-ecological research - an opportunity for redirection
  26. Concluding remarks: Meet the future—with International Business Administration and Entrepreneurship
  27. Automated Invoice Processing: Machine Learning-Based Information Extraction for Long Tail Suppliers
  28. Application of Adaptive Element-Free Galerkin Method to Simulate Friction Stir Welding of Aluminum
  29. Advancing protected area effectiveness assessments by disentangling social-ecological interactions
  30. Absenteeism as a Reaction to Harmful Behavior in the Workplace from a Stress Theory Point of View