INFLUENCE OF FIRE AND SOIL NUTRIENTS ON NATIVE AND NONNATIVE ANNUALS AT REMNANT VEGETATION EDGES IN THE WESTERN AUSTRALIAN WHEAT-BELT

被引:74
作者
HESTER, AJ
HOBBS, RJ
机构
[1] CSIRO, Division of Wildlife & Ecology, Midland, Western Australia
关键词
EDGE EFFECT; INVASION; NITRATE; PHOSPHORUS; PLANT REMOVAL; SEED PRODUCTION;
D O I
10.2307/3236003
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The effect of fire on annual plants was examined in two vegetation types at remnant vegetation edges in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Density and cover of non-native species were consistently greatest at the reserve edges, decreasing rapidly with incresing distance from reserve edge. Numbers of native species showed little effect of distance from reserve edge. Fire had no apparent effect on abundance of non-natives in Allocasuarina shrubland but abundance of native plants increased. Density of both non-native and native plants in Acacia acuminata-Eucalyptus loxophleba woodland decreased after fire. Fewer non-native species were found in the shrubland than in the woodland in both unburnt and burnt areas, this difference being smallest between burnt areas. Levels of soil phosphorus and nitrate were higher in burnt areas of both communities and ammonium also increased in the shrubland. Levels of soil phosphorus and nitrate were higher at the reserve edge in the unburnt shrubland, but not in the woodland. There was a strong correlation between soil phosphorus levels and abundance of non-native species in the unburnt shrubland, but not after fire or in the woodland. Removal of non-native plants in the burnt shrubland had a strong positive effect on total abundance of native plants, apparently due to increases in growth of smaller, suppressed native plants in response to decreased competition. Two native species showed increased seed production in plots where non-native plants had been removed. There was a general indication that, in the short term, fire does not necessarily increase invasion of these communities by non-native species and could, therefore be a useful management tool in remnant vegetation, providing other disturbances are minimised.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 108
页数:8
相关论文
共 27 条
  • [1] Bell D.T., Hopkins A.J.M., Pate J.S., Fire in the Kwongan, Kwongan. Plant Life of the Sandplain, pp. 178-202, (1984)
  • [2] Cale P., Hobbs R.J., Condition of roadside vegetation in relation to nutrient status, Nature Conservation 2: the Role of Corridors, pp. 353-362, (1991)
  • [3] Christensen P.E., Burrows N.D., Fire: an old tool with a new use, Ecology of biological invasions
  • [4] an Australian perspective, pp. 97-105, (1986)
  • [5] Fox M.D., Fox B.J., The susceptibility of natural communities to invasion, Ecology of biological invasions: an Australian perspective, pp. 57-66, (1986)
  • [6] Geiger R., The Climate near the Ground., (1965)
  • [7] Geldenhuys C.J., Le Roux P.J., Cooper K.H., Alien invasions in indigenous evergreen forest, The ecology and management of biological invasions in southern Africa, pp. 119-132, (1986)
  • [8] Green J.W., Census of the vascular plants of Western Australia., (1985)
  • [9] Groves R.H., Plant invasions of Australia: an overview, Ecology of biological invasions, pp. 137-149, (1986)
  • [10] Heddle E.M., Specht R.L., Dark Island Heath (Ninety‐Mile Plain, South Australia). VIII. The effects of fertilisers on composition and growth, Australian Journal of Botany, 23, pp. 151-164, (1975)