13.07.2015 Views

The use of chronosequences in studies of ecological succession ...

The use of chronosequences in studies of ecological succession ...

The use of chronosequences in studies of ecological succession ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Chronosequences, <strong>succession</strong> and soil development 735Nakamura, F., Yajima, T. & Kikuchi, S. (1997) Structure and composition <strong>of</strong>riparian forests with special reference to geomorphic site conditions alongthe Tokachi River, northern Japan. Plant Ecology, 133, 209–219.Nilsson, C. & Wilson, S.D. (1991) Convergence <strong>in</strong> plant community structurealong a disparate gradient: are lakeshores <strong>in</strong>verted mounta<strong>in</strong>sides? <strong>The</strong>American Naturalist, 137, 774–790.Noble, M.G., Lawrence, D.B. & Streveler, G.P. (1984) Sphagnum <strong>in</strong>vasionbeneath an evergreen forest canopy <strong>in</strong> southeastern Alaska. Bryologist, 87,119–127.Ohtonen, R., Fritze, H., Pennanen, T., Jumpponen, A. & Trappe, J.M. (1999)Ecosystem properties and microbial community changes <strong>in</strong> primary <strong>succession</strong>on a glacier forefront. Oecologia, 119, 239–246.Olson, J.S. (1958) Rates <strong>of</strong> <strong>succession</strong> and soil changes on southern Lake Michigansand dunes. Botanical Gazette, 119, 125–170.Peltzer, D.A., Wardle, D.A., Allison, V.J., Baisden, W.T., Bardgett, R.D.,Chadwick, O.A. et al. (<strong>in</strong> press) Understand<strong>in</strong>g ecosystem retrogression.Ecological Monographs.Pickett, S.T.A. (1989) Space-for-time substitutions as an alternative to longterm<strong>studies</strong>. Long-term Studies <strong>in</strong> Ecology (ed. G.E. Likens), pp. 110–135.Spr<strong>in</strong>ger, New York.Pickett, S.T.A., Cadenasso, M.L. & Me<strong>in</strong>ers, S.J. (2009) Ever s<strong>in</strong>ce Clements:from <strong>succession</strong> to vegetation dynamics and understand<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>in</strong>tervention.Applied Vegetation Science, 12,9–21.Poli Marchese, E. & Grillo, M. (2000) Primary <strong>succession</strong> on lava flows on Mt.Etna. Acta Phytogeographica Suecica, 85,61–70.Prach, K. (1994) Vegetation <strong>succession</strong> on river gravel bars across the northwesternHimalayas. Arctic and Alp<strong>in</strong>e Research, 26, 349–353.Richardson, S.J., Peltzer, D.A., Allen, R.B. & McGlone, M.S. (2005) Resorptionpr<strong>of</strong>iciency along a chronosequence: responses among communities andwith<strong>in</strong> species. Ecology, 86,20–25.Russell, A.E., Raich, J.W. & Vito<strong>use</strong>k, P.M. (1998) <strong>The</strong> ecology <strong>of</strong> the climb<strong>in</strong>gfern Dicranopteris l<strong>in</strong>earis on w<strong>in</strong>dward Mauna Loa, Hawaii. Journal <strong>of</strong>Ecology, 86, 765–779.Ryd<strong>in</strong>, H. & Borgegård, S.-O. (1991) Plant characteristics over a century <strong>of</strong> primary<strong>succession</strong> on islands, Lake Hja¨lmaren. Ecology, 72, 1089–1101.Samuels, C.L. & Drake, J.A. (1997) Divergent perspectives on community convergence.Trends <strong>in</strong> Ecology and Evolution, 12, 427–432.Schmidt, S.K., Reed, S.C., Nemergut, D.R., Grandy, A.S., Cleveland,C.C., We<strong>in</strong>traub, M.N., Hill, A.W., Costello, E.K., Meyer, A.F., Neff,J.C. & Mart<strong>in</strong>, A.M. (2008) <strong>The</strong> earliest stages <strong>of</strong> ecosystem <strong>succession</strong><strong>in</strong> high-elevation (5000 metres above sea level), recently deglaciatedsoils. Proceed<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>of</strong> the Royal Society, Series B – Biological Sciences,275, 2793–2802.Selmants, P.C. & Hart, S.C. (2008) Substrate age and tree islands <strong>in</strong>fluence carbonand nitrogen dynamics across a semiarid retrogressive chronosequence.Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 22,GB1021.Setälä, H. & Marshall, V. (1994) Stumps as a habitat for Collembola dur<strong>in</strong>g<strong>succession</strong> from clear-cuts to old-growth Douglas-fir forests. Pedobiologia,38, 307–326.Silvertown, J., McConway, K.J., Hughes, Z., Biss, P., Macnair, M. & Lutman,P. (2002) Ecological and genetic correlates <strong>of</strong> long-term population trends <strong>in</strong>the park grass experiment. <strong>The</strong> American Naturalist, 160, 409–420.Sousa, W.P. (1984) <strong>The</strong> role <strong>of</strong> disturbance <strong>in</strong> natural communities. AnnualReview <strong>of</strong> Ecology and Systematics, 15, 353–391.Tejan-Kella, M.S., Chittleborough, D.J., Fitzpatrick, R.W., Thompson, C.H.,Prescott, J.R. & Hutton, J.T. (1990) <strong>The</strong>rmolum<strong>in</strong>escence dat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> coastalsand dunes at Cooloola and North Stradbroke Island, Australia. AustralianJournal <strong>of</strong> Soil Research, 28, 465–481.Thompson, C.H. (1981) Podzol chronosequence on coastal dunes <strong>in</strong> easternAustralia. Nature, 91,59–61.Thompson, C.H. & Moore, A.W. (1984) Studies <strong>in</strong> Landscape Dynamics <strong>in</strong> theCooloola – Noosa River Area, Queensland. 1. Introduction, General Descriptionand Research Approaches. CSIRO Australian Division <strong>of</strong> Soils Report73, Canberra, ACT, Australia.Tilman, D. (1988) Plant Strategies and the Dynamics and Structure <strong>of</strong> PlantCommunities. Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton University Press, Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton, NJ, USA.Ugol<strong>in</strong>i, F.C. & Mann, D.H. (1979) Biopedological orig<strong>in</strong> <strong>of</strong> peatlands <strong>in</strong>southeast Alaska. Nature, 281, 366–368.Van der Putten, W.H., Van Dijk, C. & Peters, B.A.M. (1993) Plant-specific soilbornediseases contribute to <strong>succession</strong> <strong>in</strong> foredune vegetation. Nature, 362,53–56.Vancouver, G. (1798) A Voyage <strong>of</strong> Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean, andRound the World; <strong>in</strong> Which the Coast <strong>of</strong> North-west America Has been CarefullyExam<strong>in</strong>ed and Accurately Surveyed, Vol. 3, pp. 244–245. Rob<strong>in</strong>son,London.Vito<strong>use</strong>k, P.M. (2004) Nutrient Cycl<strong>in</strong>g and Limitation: Hawaii as a Model System.Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton University Press, Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton, NJ, USA.Walker, J. & Reddell, P. (2007) Retrogressive <strong>succession</strong> and restoration on oldlandscapes. L<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g Restoration and Ecological Succession (eds L.R. Walker,J. Walker & R.J. Hobbs), pp. 69–89. Spr<strong>in</strong>ger, New York.Walker, J., Thompson, C.H., Fergus, I.F. & Tunstall, B.R. (1981) Plant <strong>succession</strong>and soil development <strong>in</strong> coastal sand dunes <strong>of</strong> subtropical eastern Australia.Forest Succession Concepts and Application (eds D.C. West, H.H.Shugart & D.B. Botk<strong>in</strong>), pp. 107–131. Spr<strong>in</strong>ger, New York.Walker, J., Thompson, C.H., Reddell, P. & Olley, J. (2000) Retrogressive <strong>succession</strong>on an old landscape. Proceed<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>of</strong> the 41st Symposium <strong>of</strong> the IAVS(ed. P. White), pp. 21–23. Opulus Press, Uppsala.Walker, J., Thompson, C.H., Reddell, P. & Rapport, D.J. (2001) <strong>The</strong> importance<strong>of</strong> landscape age <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>fluenc<strong>in</strong>g landscape health. Ecosystem Health, 7,7–14.Walker, L.R. (1995) How unique is primary plant <strong>succession</strong> at Glacier Bay?Proceed<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>of</strong> the Third Glacier Bay Science Symposium, 1993 (ed. D.R.Engstrom), pp. 137–146. National Park Service, Anchorage, AK, USA.Walker, L.R., ed. (1999) Ecosystems <strong>of</strong> Disturbed Ground. Elsevier, Amsterdam.Walker, L.R. & del Moral, R. (2003) Primary Succession and Ecosystem Rehabilitation.Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Walker, L.R. & del Moral, R. (2009) Lessons from primary <strong>succession</strong> for restoration<strong>of</strong> severely damaged habitats. Applied Vegetation Science, 12, 55–67.Walker, L.R. & Shiels, A.B. (2008) Post-disturbance erosion impacts carbonfluxes and plant <strong>succession</strong> on recent tropical landslides. Plant and Soil, 313,205–216.Walker, L.R., Velázquez, E. & Shiels, A.B. (2009) Apply<strong>in</strong>g lessons from <strong>ecological</strong><strong>succession</strong> to the restoration <strong>of</strong> landslides. Plant and Soil, 324, 157–168.Walker, L.R., Zar<strong>in</strong>, D.J., Fetcher, N., Myster, R.W. & Johnson, A.H. (1996)Ecosystem development and plant <strong>succession</strong> on landslides <strong>in</strong> the Caribbean.Biotropica, 28, 566–576.Walker, T.W. & Syers, J.K. (1976) <strong>The</strong> fate <strong>of</strong> phosphorus dur<strong>in</strong>g pedogenesis.Geoderma, 15,1–19.Wardle, D.A. (2002) Communities and Ecosystems: L<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g the Abovegroundand Belowground Components. Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton University Press, Pr<strong>in</strong>ceton, NJ,USA.Wardle, D.A., Walker, L.R. & Bardgett, R.D. (2004) Ecosystem properties andforest decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> contrast<strong>in</strong>g long-term <strong>chronosequences</strong>. Science, 305, 509–513.Wardle, D.A. & Zackrisson, O. (2005) Effects <strong>of</strong> species and functional grouploss on island ecosystem properties. Nature, 435, 806–810.Wardle, D.A., Zackrisson, O., Hörnberg, G. & Gallet, C. (1997) Influence <strong>of</strong>island area on ecosystem properties. Science, 277, 1296–1299.Wardle, D.A., Bardgett, R.D., Walker, L.R., Peltzer, D.A. & Lagerström, A.(2008) <strong>The</strong> response <strong>of</strong> plant diversity to ecosystem retrogression: evidencefrom contrast<strong>in</strong>g long-term <strong>chronosequences</strong>. Oikos, 117, 93–103.Wardle, D.A., Bardgett, R.D., Walker, L.R. & Bonner, K.I. (2009) Amongandwith<strong>in</strong>-species variation <strong>in</strong> plant litter decomposition <strong>in</strong> contrast<strong>in</strong>glong-term <strong>chronosequences</strong>. Functional Ecology, 23, 442–453.Warm<strong>in</strong>g, E. (1895) Plantesamfund: Gruntra¨kafdenO¨kologiska Plantegeografi.Philipsen, Copenhagen.Watt, A.S. (1947) Pattern and process <strong>in</strong> the plant community. Journal <strong>of</strong> Ecology,35, 1–23.Webb, R.H. (1996) Grand Canyon, a Century <strong>of</strong> Change. University <strong>of</strong> ArizonaPress, Tucson, AZ, USA.White, P.S. & Pickett, S.T.A., eds (1985) Natural disturbance and patchdynamics: an <strong>in</strong>troduction. <strong>The</strong> Ecology <strong>of</strong> Natural Disturbance and PatchDynamics, pp. 3–13. Academic Press, Orlando, FL, USA.Whitehead, D., Boelman, N.T., Turnbull, M.H., Griff<strong>in</strong>, K.L., Tissue, D.T.,Barbour, M.M., Hunt, J.E., Richardson, S.J. & Peltzer, D.A. (2005) Photosynthesisand reflectance <strong>in</strong>dices for ra<strong>in</strong>forest species <strong>in</strong> ecosystems undergo<strong>in</strong>gprogression and retrogression along a soil fertility chronosequence <strong>in</strong>New Zealand. Oecologia, 144, 233–244.Whittaker, R.H. (1953) A consideration <strong>of</strong> climax theory: the climax as a populationand pattern. Ecological Monographs, 23, 41–78.Whittaker, R.J., Partomihardjo, T. & Jones, S.H. (1999) Interest<strong>in</strong>g times onKrakatau: stand dynamics <strong>in</strong> the 1990s. Philosophical Transactions <strong>of</strong> theRoyal Society <strong>of</strong> London, Series B – Biological Sciences, 354, 1857–1867.Williamson, W.M., Wardle, D.A. & Yeates, G.W. (2005) Changes <strong>in</strong> soilmicrobial and nematode communities dur<strong>in</strong>g ecosystem retrogressionacross a long term chronosequence. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 37,1289–1301.Ó 2010 <strong>The</strong> Authors. Journal compilation Ó 2010 British Ecological Society, Journal <strong>of</strong> Ecology, 98, 725–736

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!