4.7 Article

The weight of the past: land-use legacies and recolonization of pine plantations by oak trees

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 1267-1276

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/12-0459.1

Keywords

biological legacies; historical vs; ecological factors; land-use change; land-use legacies; pine density; pine plantations; Quercus regeneration; seed dispersal

Funding

  1. project Consolider-Ingenio Montes from the Fundamental Research Project Programme of the Spanish Government [CSD2008-00040]
  2. MIGRAME from the Excellence Research Group Programme of the Andalusian Government [RNM 6734]
  3. MICINN [PTA 2011-6322-I]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Most of the world's plantations were established on previously disturbed sites with an intensive land-use history. Our general hypothesis was that native forest regeneration within forest plantations depends largely on in situ biological legacies as a source of propagules. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed native oak regeneration in 168 pine plantation plots in southern Spain in relation to land use in 1956, oak patch proximity, and pine tree density. Historical land-use patterns were determined from aerial photography from 1956, and these were compared with inventory data from 2004-2005 and additional orthophoto images. Our results indicate that oak forest regeneration in pine plantations depends largely on land-use legacies, although nearby, well-conserved areas can provide propagules for colonization from outside the plantation, and pine tree density also affected oak recruit density. More intense land uses in the past meant fewer biological legacies and, therefore, lower likelihood of regenerating native forest. That is, oak recruit density was lower when land use in 1956 was croplands (0.004 +/- 0.002 recruits/m(2) [mean +/- SE]) or pasture (0.081 +/- 0.054 recruits/m(2)) instead of shrubland (0.098 +/- 0.031 recruits/m(2)) or oak formations (0.314 +/- 0.080 recruits/m(2)). Our study shows that land use in the past was more important than propagule source distance or pine tree density in explaining levels of native forest regeneration in plantations. Thus, strategies for restoring native oak forests in pine plantations may benefit from considering land-use legacies as well as distance to propagule sources and pine density.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available