Historic deforestation and non‐native plant invasions determine vegetation trajectories across an oceanic archipelago

Author:

Ohashi Haruka1ORCID,Kato Hitoshi2,Murao Mina2ORCID,Kato Hidetoshi3,Kawakami Kazuto1ORCID,Kurokawa Hiroko4ORCID,Oguro Michio4ORCID,Kimura Fuku5,Niiyama Kaoru4ORCID,Matsui Tetsuya56ORCID,Shibata Mitsue4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wildlife Biology, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute Forest Management Organization Tsukuba Japan

2. General Incorporated Association Japan Forest Technology Association Tokyo Japan

3. Faculty of Science Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Forest Vegetation, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute Forest Management Organization Tsukuba Japan

5. Center for Biodiversity and Climate Change, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute Forest Management Organization Tsukuba Japan

6. Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Tsukuba Tsukuba Japan

Abstract

AbstractQuestionsOceanic islands are global hotspots of endemism and evolutionary radiations but many have been severely degraded by human activities and biological invasions. We evaluated the pace and direction of the natural recovery of ecosystems over 77 years across a subtropical oceanic archipelago including islands of various size, elevation, histories of human settlement and deforestation, and invasions by non‐native plants and mammals. This information is essential to guide the ecological restoration of the archipelago.LocationForest vegetation on nine of the Ogasawara Islands in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.MethodsWe first digitized historical vegetation data of the Ogasawara Islands collected during field surveys in 1935. Then, after checking their species compositions, we integrated past and present plant community types. Finally, we identified the landscape‐scale changes in forest vegetation by comparing vegetation maps from 1935, 1979 and 2012.ResultsOver 77 years, the vegetation trajectories of each island varied depending on the introduction of invasive alien species and the remaining proportion of native forest, the latter of which had a strong influence on the recoverability of native forest.ConclusionsOur results highlight the importance of the history of invasive species introductions and the remaining proportion of native forest—both of which reflect the intensity of anthropogenic disturbance—in determining the degree of human intervention needed for restoration on oceanic islands.

Publisher

Wiley

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