4.5 Article

Isolation affects tree-scale epiphytic lichen community structure on New Zealand mountain beech trees

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 1062-1071

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2011.01315.x

Keywords

Dispersal limitation; Establishment limitation; New Zealand; Nothofagus solandri; Occupancy; Species-area relationship

Funding

  1. Lincoln University

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Question: Is epiphytic lichen community structure significantly affected by isolation from source community? Location: Foothills of the Southern Alps, South Island, New Zealand. Methods: Epiphytic lichen richness and environmental variables were measured on 382, young Nothofagus solandri var. cliffortioides (Hook. f.) Poole (mountain beech) trees that had recently colonized grassland adjacent to a forest remnant. Richness and the presence of individual lichen taxa were modelled as a function of isolation from the forest fragment, tree size and other habitat conditions. Results: Richness of epiphytic lichen communities was negatively related to tree isolation, although this effect was much smaller than the effects of tree size and other local (tree-scale) habitat conditions. Different lichen taxa responded in different ways to isolation, area effects and local habitat conditions. Conclusions: This study shows that many epiphytic lichens on mountain beech are limited in their ability to colonize new substrate, even over distances of less than 1 km, which may be due to limitation in dispersal and/or establishment. Lichens are greatly influenced by local habitat conditions, such as tree size, and in this particular environment their negative interaction with sooty moulds is an important driver of community structure.

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