GROUND FLORA TRAMPLING STUDIES - 5 YEARS AFTER CLOSURE

被引:56
作者
KUSS, FR [1 ]
HALL, CN [1 ]
机构
[1] NAT CONSERVANCY COUNCIL,SAN LUIS OBISPO,CA 93405
关键词
CARRYING CAPACITY; TRAMPLING; RESISTANCE; RESILIENCY; HERB LAYER; SOIL COMPACTION;
D O I
10.1007/BF02589629
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Trampling as an ecological factor is a major concern of the management of park, forest, nature preserves, and wilderness areas as recreational resources. Of particular importance to the management concept of carrying capacity is the relative resistance of native plant communities to trampling and the resilience or the capacity of impacted communities to recover. This information can be used by management to establish seasonal use limits to prevent irreversible degradation of these resources. The purpose of this study was to follow the recolonization of experimental trail surfaces barren of vegetative cover and hiked at three levels of use intensity. Results of this study indicate that soil compaction as measured by soil penetration resistance increased progressively with use level while the total number of species, species diversity, and dominant index scores declined. A major finding was that the greatest degree of change occurred at the first level of hiking, indicating that major floristic measures were most affected by the least amount of hiking. Recolonization of impacted areas that received 100 trampling passes as measured by plant cover, dominant indices, floristic dissimilarity, and species diversity was similar to areas receiving four and eight times more trampling, despite major differences in soil penetration resistance. These data suggest limited use delivered at one time can be as damaging as increasing levels of use delivered over time.
引用
收藏
页码:715 / 727
页数:13
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