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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5052
    Keywords: Bird dispersal ; Dune forest ; Facilitation ; Old fields ; Secondary succession ; Seed source ; Soil development
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Within a few years of field abandonment on the coastal dunes, a considerable number of species of trees and woody lianes of the climax evergreen forest enter the succession. At a relatively large-scale of analysis (a 100 m2 plot), there is no evidence of soil development during the early succession, with no accumulation of soil organic matter nor nutrients being detected. At this scale there is, therefore, little support for the facilitation model of succession. However, when smaller scales of analysis are employed (e.g. a plot equivalent to the canopy area of a sapling) a very different picture emerges; most recruitment of forest woody species occurs beneath saplings found in early succession. Nutrient concentrations were higher in soils under sapling canopies than in soils beyond sapling canopies. With increasing sapling size, an increasing number of seedlings of forest woody species were found and there is progressive soil amelioration. Thus, during the early succession, there is considerable small-scale patterning in soil development and recruitment. This pattern is largely established through bird dispersal, with the intensity of recruitment being dependent on the distance to seed sources.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5052
    Keywords: Growth form ; Initial floristic composition ; Old field ; Relay floristics ; Soil development ; Structure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Old field succession was studied on coastal dunes supporting tropical evergreen forest on Inhaca Island, Mozambique. Plots of 10×10 m were sited in three early successional stages and in relatively undisturbed forest. Woody species increased in number during succession; leptophylls were most frequent in younger vegetation, whereas microphylls and mesophylls were most frequent in forest. Grasses, shrubs and forbs dominated initially following abandonment, and shrubs persisted as dominants in the three early successional stages. The initial floristic composition model was generally supported by the pattern of species sequences, with many forest species entering early in the succession. Of the few species conforming to the relay floristic model, many were grasses and forbs of the forest understorey. Similarity between plots of equivalent vegetation age indicated that, at least in early succession, there was linearity in the successional pathway; there was no evidence for divergence or multiple pathways. In early succession, no accumulation was detected in either soil organic matter or extractable nutrients, thus providing little support for the facilitation model of succession. It is stressed that the findings are probably scale-dependent.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 247 (1992), S. 49-57 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: coastline configuration ; mangrove ; selective death ; Mozambique
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Changes in coastline configuration and sand movements on Portuguese Island, a small island lying close to Inhaca Island 35 km east of Maputo, Mozambique have resulted in large areas of the Island being eroded away and consequent restricted tidal recharge of the mangrove. Measurements made during 1989 show that flooding of the mangrove occurred on only three occasions. Percentage mortality of the dominant species,Ceriops tagal (Perr.) C. B. Robinson., is high. However, at the time of the study, the co-dominant,Bruguiera gymnorrhiza (L.) Lam., showed no signs of stress. Halophytic conditions are indicated by an invasive spread of salt-tolerant herbs. All species of crustaceans and molluscs have disappeared from the mangrove. Although mortality ofC. tagal is high, the regeneration status of this species is also high, comparable to that in a regularly recharged mangrove on Inhaca Island. It is suggested thatC. tagal propagules were shed under conditions when seedling establishment was favorable i.e. flooding. These seedlings may represent the last cohort which may also suffer stress and death unless tidal recharge is re-established.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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