4.4 Article

Facilitation and sand burial affect plant survival during restoration of a tropical coastal sand dune degraded by tourist cars

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 390-397

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12327

Keywords

abiotic conditions; Canavalia maritima; coconut mesh; germination; microclimate; seedling establishment; vegetation patches

Categories

Funding

  1. Brazilian Committee of Higher Education (CAPES)
  2. CNPq
  3. PVE program of CNPq
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
  5. program TUMBRA - Germany Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)

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Coastal sand dunes support various ecosystem services, including storm protection and tourism. Restoration programs are often critical to preserve this ecosystem due to its fragility and high degree of degradation. Dune restoration still suffers from a general lack of knowledge of the ecological processes controlling tropical dune communities. We investigated if facilitation can increase restoration success by assisting plant survival in a Brazilian coastal dune degraded by buggies at the Environmental Protection Area of Jenipabu, RN, Brazil. We performed two field experiments on dune crest sites degraded by buggies. The first experiment tested how the presence of established vegetation and coconut mesh, mimicking soil-stabilizing effect of vegetation, facilitates seedling survival and establishment of the early successional dominant dune plant Canavalia maritima ( Fabaceae). The second experiment tested if coconut mesh and initial irrigation would allow the establishment of C. maritima outside the vegetation, using both seeds and transplants. We found that the presence of established vegetation positively affected seedling survival. Application of mesh positively affected microclimatic conditions and slightly increased survival, but only for seeds. Initial irrigation only had a small effect on transplanted seedlings survival. Nevertheless, there was extreme seedling mortality in the experiment in particular from sand burial. We conclude that restoration of these dune crests is very difficult. Facilitation by vegetation can reduce plant mortality by sand burial and desiccation, but successful restoration is likely to require a major effort involving a very high number of seedlings or seeds.

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