Thursday, March 29, 2012

"Impact of the invasive glossy buckthorn on juvenile recruitment by canopy trees"


Article on Forest Ecology and Management, Glossy Buckthorn

This scholarly article is a case study concerning the highly invasive common buckthorn (Rhamnus Frangula) and its current known impacts on forest anatomy in the northeast United States. The common buckthorn is an invasive plant species that has been rapidly moving its way through pine forests in the northeast USA for over 20 years now. The plant is extremely shade tolerant and drought resistant, making it one of the most likely plants to dominate a forest ecosystem. In the study, the survival and growth of juvenile species of sugar maple, red maple, white ash and white pine were monitored to determine if the shading caused by excess buckthorn was causing the stunted growth or death of the seedlings. The ones performing the study, M.E Fagan and D.R Peart of Dartmouth College, hypothesized that the buckthorn would have the greatest negative effect on more shade intolerant species due to the fact that the buckthorn reduces UV radiation reaching those seedlings. By altering the production of seedlings due to buckthorn shading, it was also hypothesized that the growth of seedlings into saplings would reduce as well. This in turn causes less trees and diversity to grow full.
            The study was performed on private land of 2.5 hectares located in Signal Hill, New Hampshire for 9 years. More than 75 percent of the mature trees were white pine with smaller densities of the maple and ash seedlings. Buckthorn was seen to be at 100 percent coverage in some spots. 30 random seedlings were chosen for measurement, all ranging in shade tolerance gradient and each individual seedling was measured for annual growth and extension and radial growth. The chosen seedlings were monitored and observed as they did or did not morph into saplings.
            After the study came to a conclusion, the results were very vivid and clear. The first thing noted was the saplings trying to grow under the buckthorn had lower mean extension growth as well as lower radial growth. Although all the species differed in shade tolerance, the decrease was still very similar across the board. Saplings growing under just the pine canopy showed no significant effect on growth change. It was also noted that most saplings that sprung growth under the buckthorn showed stunted life spans by an average of 4 years. This showed the studiers that it would take 22 years for a sapling to grow 1.3 meters in height; very below the average growth rate for any of the seedlings.
            The results of the study showed that glosyy buckthorn has clearly reduced the growth of all seedlings and saplings of the maple and ash species selected. It was proven that the saplings grew much more rapidly in canopy openings away from the buckthorn where the limiting resource, sunlight, was more prominent. Although the study was done with the limiting resource as sunlight, the study claims that buckthorn is also rapidly depleting nitrogen and minerals from the soil, decreasing pH, which in turn causes diversity to slim and growth to slow. As a result, the professors drew the conclusion that with the increasing dominance of the buckthrorn in pine forests, changes in species diversity and composition rate of the forest are to rapidly change as well. The buckthorn movement needs to be constantly monitored in the pine forests of the northeast in order to plot the attack against it. 

By: Matt Hollingsworth
Fagan, M.E, and D.R Peart. Impact of the Invasiveshrubglossybuckthorn (Rhamnus Frangula L.) on Juvenilerecruitment by Canopytrees. Dartmouth College, July-Aug. 2003. Web. <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378112704001367>.

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