Standardsignatur
Titel
Regeneration of a marginal Cork oak (Quercus suber) forest in the eastern Iberian Peninsula
Verfasser
Erscheinungsort
Uppsala
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr
2006
Seiten
S. 729-738
Illustrationen
6 Abb., 4 Tab., 50 Lit. Ang.
Material
Artikel aus einer ZeitschriftUnselbständiges Werk
Datensatznummer
200139552
Quelle
Abstract
Small and marginal forest populations are a focus of attention because of their high biodiversity value as well as the risk of population decline and loss. In this context, we ask to what extent a small, marginal Quercus suber (Cork oak) population located in the eastern Iberian Peninsula (Valencia, Spain) has the capacity for self-regeneration and what are the factors that determine its recruitment variability. We performed a spatially explicit sampling both of the recruitment and of the potential parameters that could account for the recruitment variability. Using regression techniques we model the recruitment occurrence and abundance, and then we test to what extent the model obtained is still constrained by the spatial dependence. Quercus suber recruitment density ranges from 0 to 18.66 individuals/25m2 (mean = 1.46, SD = 2.8), with a very skewed distribution. Recruitment is similar under Q. suber forests and under Pinus forests, but it is almost absent under shrublands. Thus the parameters that explain most of the recruitment variability in local vegetation types are: the presence and cover of shrubs (negative relationship with recruitment), the basal area of Q. suber and Pinus and the amount of bare soil (all positively related to recruitment). These parameters are strongly related to the ecological processes driving recruitment (i.e. dispersal and predation) and they remove most of the spatial dependence of recruitment. Most recruiters, however, are small, forming a seedling bank rather than growing to successfully colonize new habitats.