scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate and coastal dune vegetation: disturbance, recovery, and succession.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, a nine-year census of 294 plots on St. George Island, Florida suggests that the major climatic drivers of vegetation patterns vary with habitat, likely because of the interplay among plant succession, exposure, disturbance, and resource availability.
Abstract
The sand dune habitats found on barrier islands and other coastal areas support a dynamic plant community while protecting areas further inland from waves and wind. Foredune, interdune, and backdune habitats common to most coastal dunes have very different vegetation, likely because of the interplay among plant succession, exposure, disturbance, and resource availability. However, surprisingly few long-term data are available describing dune vegetation patterns. A nine-year census of 294 plots on St. George Island, Florida suggests that the major climatic drivers of vegetation patterns vary with habitat. Community structure is correlated with the elevation, soil moisture, and percent soil ash of each 1 m2 plot. Major storms reduce species richness in all three habitats. Principle coordinate analysis suggests that changes in the plant communities through time are caused by climatic events: changes in foredune vegetation are correlated with temperature and summer precipitation, interdune vegetation with storm surge, and backdune vegetation with precipitation and storm surge. We suggest that the plant communities in foredune, interdune, and backdune habitats tend to undergo succession toward particular compositions of species, with climatic disturbances pushing the communities away from these more deterministic trajectories.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Conservation implications of ecological responses to extreme weather and climate events

TL;DR: This paper reviewed 519 observational studies of ecological responses to extreme events between 1941 and 2015, including responses from amphibians, birds, fish, invertebrates, mammals, plants and reptiles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Factors Influencing Coastal Vegetation Pattern: New Insights from the Mediterranean Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the relative contribution of environmental factors associated with two of the main drivers of vegetation zonation: soil and wind was analyzed in Mediterranean coast dune ecosystems, and the relationship between plant communities and environmental factors was investigated through unconstrained and constrained ordinations, correlation, and variance partitioning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mediterranean Coastal Sand Dune Vegetation: Influence of Natural and Anthropogenic Factors

TL;DR: Differences in the conservation status of coastal dune systems in Tuscany were found, ranging from the total disappearance of the foredune habitats to the presence of the complete psammophilous (sand-loving) plant communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological Soil Crusts from Coastal Dunes at the Baltic Sea: Cyanobacterial and Algal Biodiversity and Related Soil Properties

TL;DR: The data indicate that BSCs in coastal dunes of the southern Baltic Sea represent an ecologically important vegetation form with a surprisingly high site-specific diversity of 19 cyanobacteria, 51 non-diatom algae, and 55 diatoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial application of Random Forest models for fine-scale coastal vegetation classification using object based analysis of aerial orthophoto and DEM data

TL;DR: Aerial image and DEM-based RF models had low transferability to new areas due to lack of representation of aerial image, landscape and vegetation variation in training data, but show promise at local scale for supporting conservation and management with vegetation mappings of high spatial and thematic detail based on low-cost image data.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Species divergence and trait convergence in experimental plant community assembly

TL;DR: The results show that the simultaneous operation of trait-based assembly rules and species-level priority effects drives community assembly, making it both deterministic and historically contingent, but at different levels of community organization.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Influence of Complex Systems Interactions on Barrier Island Dune Vegetation Pattern and Process

TL;DR: In this paper, the interplay of local environmental gradients and disturbance patches initiated by overwash during coastal storms was investigated for dune systems of two barrier islands in the Georgia Bight, and they described how this interplay constitutes a complex biogeomorphic system in which disturbance and recovery along gradients reinforce one another in positive feedback.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial and temporal variability during primary succession on tropical coastal sand dunes

TL;DR: The results indicate that sand movement decreased over time but was significantly higher on the slopes and crests than on the arms, and the equitability values indicated the dominance of a few species, especially at the end of the study period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability domains in barrier island dune systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed models of dune landscape phase states, or stability domains, based on a synthesis of prior studies and statistical analyses and tested a suite of hypotheses built from the premise that the biogeomorphic interactions on each island engender unique landscape patterns.