Affiliation:
1. Hokkaido Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
Abstract
The epidemic of mass mortality of oak trees by Japanese oak wilt has affected secondary deciduous broadleaved forests that have been used as coppices in Japan. The dieback of oak trees formed gaps in the crown that would be expected to enhance the regeneration of shade-intolerant pioneer species. However, foraging by sika deerCervus nipponhas also affected forest vegetation, and the compound effects of both on forest regeneration should be considered when they simultaneously occur. A field study was conducted in Kyôto City, Japan to investigate how these compound effects affected the vegetation of the understory layer of these forests. The presence/absence of seedlings and saplings was observed for 200 quadrats sized 5 m ×5 m for each species in 1992, before the mass mortality and deer encroachment, and in 2014 after these effects. A hierarchical Bayesian model was constructed to explain the occurrence, survival, and colonization of each species with their responses to the gaps that were created, expanded, or affected by the mass mortality ofQuercus serratatrees. The species that occurred most frequently in 1992,Eurya japonica,Quercus glauca, andCleyera japonica, also had the highest survival probabilities. Deer-unpalatable species such asSymplocos prunifoliaandTriadica sebiferahad higher colonization rates in the gaps, while the deer-palatable speciesAucuba japonicahad the smallest survival probability. The gaps thus promoted the colonization of deer-unpalatable plant species such asSymplocos prunifoliaandTriadica sebifera. In the future, such deer-unpalatable species may dominate gaps that were created, expanded, or affected by the mass mortality of oak trees.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience
Reference43 articles.
1. General methods for monitoring convergence of iterative simulations;Brooks;Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics,1998
2. A study on the structure and dynamics of Cyclobalanopsis glauca population at hills around West Lake in Hangzhou;Cai;Scientia Silvae Sinicae,2000
3. Imperfect detection is the rule rather than the exception in plant distribution studies;Chen;Journal of Ecology,2013
4. Factors affecting detection probability in plant distribution studies;Chen;Journal of Ecology,2009
5. Ecological impacts of deer overabundance;Côté;Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics,2004
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献