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Journal ArticleDOI

Herbaceous-layer impoverishment in a post-agricultural southern Appalachian landscape

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TLDR
In this article, the authors quantified herbaceous-layer change over a 26-year period in Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA, where white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) thrive in agricultural mosaics and fragmented forested landscapes.
Abstract
Large ungulates are an important driver of plant community composition and structure. In eastern North America, white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) thrive in agricultural mosaics and fragmented forested landscapes, at times reaching unprecedented densities. Nevertheless, few long-term data sets are available that allow an assessment of the long-term consequences of chronic herbivory. We quantified herbaceous-layer change over a 26 y period in Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA. Cades Cove has a long and well-documented history of deer overabundance, with densities reaching 43 deer km−2 during the late 1970s. Over the 26 y sampling interval, mean coverage of herbaceous species declined significantly (P < 0.001) in the forests bordering Cades Cove. Although most plots only lost 1–2 species during the interval, 46 herbaceous species recorded on plots during the 1970s were wholly absent in 2004 (63% of which were forest species). Additionally, the herbaceous layer has become ...

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Global meta-analysis reveals no net change in local-scale plant biodiversity over time

TL;DR: No general tendency for local-scale plant species diversity to decline over the last century is found, calling into question the widespread use of ecosystem function experiments and directly contradicts the key assumption linking experimental results to ecosystem function as a motivation for biodiversity conservation in nature.
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Promoting and maintaining diversity in contemporary hardwood forests: Confronting contemporary drivers of change and the loss of ecological memory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review how historical timber harvesting and land use, increases in deer population sizes, invasive species, and contemporary forest management practices interact to erode ecological memory and increase resilience debt of hardwood forests of eastern North America.
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Early impacts of hemlock woolly adelgid in Tsuga canadensis forest communities of the southern Appalachian Mountains1

TL;DR: Overstory and understory species composition did not significantly change over the observation period, but the overwhelming presence of Rhododendrons maximum L. (rosebay rhododendron) in the understory may influence future successional trends in forests of the southern Appalachian Mountains.
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Herbaceous layer response to 17 years of controlled deer hunting in forested natural areas

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured species richness (S), evenness (E), and Shannon-Weiner diversity (H′) in state parks and reference areas to quantify changes in herbaceous-layer vegetation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nonmetric multidimensional scaling: A numerical method

TL;DR: The numerical methods required in the approach to multi-dimensional scaling are described and the rationale of this approach has appeared previously.

Biological consequences of ecosystem fragmentation: a review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the biogeograpbic consequences of the creation of habitat islands of different sizes and have provided little of practical value to managers in the field of landscape management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological Consequences of Ecosystem Fragmentation: A Review

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the biogeograpbic consequences of the creation of habitat islands of different sizes and have provided little of practical value to managers in the field of landscape management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multivariate dispersion as a measure of beta diversity.

TL;DR: For kelp holdfast assemblages from New Zealand, variation in species composition was greater in smaller holdfasts, while variation in relative abundances was great in larger holdasts, regardless of the measure used.
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