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Travelling to a former sea floor: colonization of forests by understorey plant species on land recently reclaimed from the sea
Authors:Marleen Pierik  Jasper Van Ruijven  T Martijn Bezemer  Frank Berendse
Institution:1. Nature Conservation and Plant Ecology Group, Wageningen University, Droevendaalsesteeg 3a, 6708 PB Wageningen, the Netherlands;2. Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW), Centre for Terrestrial Ecology, Boterhoeksestraat 48, 6666 GA Heteren, the Netherlands;3. Laboratory of Nematology, Wageningen University, Binnenhaven 5 6709 PD Wageningen, the Netherlands
Abstract:Questions: What are important forest characteristics determining colonization of forest patches by forest understorey species? Location: Planted forests on land recently reclaimed from the sea, the Netherlands. Methods: We related the distribution of forest specialist species in the understorey of 55 forests in Dutch IJsselmeer polders to the following forest characteristics: age, area, connectivity, distance to mainland (as a proxy for distance to seed source) and path density. We used species of the Fraxino‐Ulmetum association for the Netherlands as reference for species that could potentially occur in the study area. Results: Area and age of the surveyed forests explained a large part of the variation in overall species composition and species number of forest plant species. The importance of connectivity and distance to the mainland of forest habitats became apparent only at a more detailed level of dispersal groups and individual species. The importance of forest parameters differed between dispersal groups and also between individual species. After 60 years, 75% of the potential pool of wind‐dispersed species has reached the polders, whereas this was only 50% for species lacking specific adaptations to long‐distance dispersal. However, the average percentage of successful colonizing species present per forest was substantially lower, ranging from 15 to 37%. Conclusions: The data strongly suggest that the colonization process in polder forests is still in its initial phase, during which easily dispersed species dominate the vegetation. Colonization success of common species that lack adaptations to long‐distance dispersal is affected by spatial configuration of the forests, and most rare species that could potentially occur in these forests are still absent. Implications for conservation of rare species in fragmented landscapes are discussed.
Keywords:Alno‐Padion  Dispersal  Forest age  Forest area  Forest herbs  Habitat fragmentation
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