Szukcesszió-elmélet az Ecology & Evolution-ben
Megjelent Kelemen András elsőszerzőségével legújabb cikkünk az Ecology & Evolution nevű nyílt hozzáférésű lapban. A cikk az évelő közösségek felhagyását követő vegetáció-változások növényi sajátságokon alapuló elemzését adja közre kiemelve a klasszikus, rövidéletű kultúrákat követő szukcesszió és az évelő kultúrák felhagyását követő szukcesszió özti különbségeket. A cikk letölthető a folyóirat honlapjáról. Az összefoglalója az alábbiakban olvasható.
New aspects of grassland recovery in old-fields revealed by trait-based analyses of perennial-crop-mediated succession
Kelemen A., Tóthmérész B., Valkó O., Miglécz T., Deák B., Török P.
Classical old-field succession studies focused on vegetation changes
after the abandonment of annual croplands or on succession after the
elimination of cultivated crops. Perennial-crop-mediated succession,
where fields are initially covered by perennial crops, reveals
alternative aspects of old-field succession theories. We tested the
validity of classical theories of old-field succession for
perennial-crop-mediated succession. We formulated the following
hypotheses: (1) functional diversity increases with increasing field
age; (2) resource acquisition versus conservation trade-off shifts
toward conservation at community level during the succession; (3) the
importance of spatial and temporal seed dispersal decreases during the
succession; and (4) competitiveness and stress-tolerance increases and
ruderality decreases at community level during the succession. We
studied functional diversity, trait distributions and plant strategies
in differently aged old-fields using chronosequence method. We found
increasing functional richness and functional divergence, but also
unchanged or decreasing functional evenness. We detected a shift from
resource acquisition to resource conservation strategy of communities
during the succession. The role of spatial and temporal seed dispersal
was found to be important not only at the initial but also at latter
successional stages. We found an increasing stress-tolerance and a
decreasing ruderality during succession, while the competitiveness
remained unchanged at the community level. Despite the markedly
different starting conditions, we found that classical and
perennial-crop-mediated old-field successions have some similarities
regarding the changes of functional diversity, resource acquisition
versus conservation trade-off, and seed dispersal strategies. However,
we revealed also the subsequent differences. The competitive character
of communities remained stable during the succession; hence, the initial
stages of perennial-crop-mediated succession can be similar to the
middle stages of classical old-field succession. Moreover, the occupied
functional niche space and differentiation were larger in the older
stages, but resources were not effectively utilized within this space,
suggesting that the stabilization of the vegetation requires more time.
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