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Successional trends and biomass of mosses on windthrow mounds in the temperate rainforests of Southeast Alaska
Authors:Jan den Ouden  Paul B Alaback
Institution:(1) Department of Terrestrial Ecology and Nature Conservation, Agricultural University, Wageningen, The Netherlands;(2) Present address: Department of Forestry, Agricultural University Wageningen, P.O. Box 342, 6700 AH Wageningen, The Netherlands;(3) Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Juneau, USA;(4) School of Forestry, University of Montana, 59812 Missoula, MT, USA
Abstract:We investigated successional trends on windthrow mounds in two old-growth Tsuga heterophylla-Picea sitchensis forests in northern southeast Alaska to determine the influence of windthrow disturbance on the maintenance of plant diversity. We were particularly interested in assessing the value of mosses in detecting long-term effects of disturbance in temperate rainforests. Mosses established a dense carpet on windthrow mounds within the first few decades after the disturbance. No consistent changes were noted in total moss and vascular plant cover, moss biomass, or species diversity between young mounds (±50 yrs), intermediate mounds (±150 yrs) or old mounds (> 200 yrs), or between mounds and the undisturbed forest floor, despite consistent differences in soils development.Classification and ordination of the vegetation data did not show a consistent relationship between soil surface age or soil depth and overall species composition on the two sites. Young mounds were the most compositionally distinctive, primarily due to moss species. Pogonatum alpinum var. sylvaticum, P. contortum and Polytrichum formosum were generally confined to young mounds with unstable substrata, while Dicranum majus and Sphagnum girgensohnii were associated with old soil surfaces and deep organic soils. Vascular plant species with affinities for riparian or deep shade habitats (Tiarella trifoliata, Coptis asplenifolia and Dryopteris expansa) showed a general preference for the forest floor. Gymnocarpium dryopteris was the only vascular plant with a significant association with young mounds.Mosses comprised approximately 25% of understory plant biomass and as much as 50% of understory productivity. In cool temperate forests, the inclusion of mosses in vegetation analysis may provide valuable insights into the nature of vegetation patterns over subtle environmental gradients. The distinctiveness of the temperate rainforest type and the unique ecological effects of windthrow disturbance in this type are also suggested by this study.Abbreviations HR = Heintzleman Ridge (study site) - OP = Outer Point (study site)
Keywords:Bryophytes  Old-growth forests  Polytrichaceae  Small-scale disturbance  Species diversity  Succession
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