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Wetland diversity in a disturbance-maintained landscape: Effects of fire and a fire surrogate on aquatic amphibian survival and species depauperateness.

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • Contributors:
      Klaus, Joyce (Author); Noss, Reed (Committee Chair); Quintana-Ascencio, Pedro (Committee Member); Jenkins, David (Committee Member); Dr. L. Katherine Kirkman (Committee Member); University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor)
    • بيانات النشر:
      University of Central Florida
    • Collection:
      UCF Digital Collections (University of Central Florida)
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      Disturbance is one of the central concepts explaining how diversity arises and is perpetuated in ecological time. A good model system for testing hypotheses related to disturbance is the longleaf pine ecosystem in the southeastern U.S. because in this ecosystem frequent, low-severity fires acts as a disturbance that maintains a unique vegetation structure and high species richness. Vegetation structure influences animal distributions; in fire-dependent ecosystems many animals rely on open-structured, fire-maintained vegetation but shrubs and trees encroach into fire-dependent ecosystems where fire has been excluded. Prescribed burning and mechanical removal are commonly used as restoration tools to control encroachment. To better assess and compare the restoration potential of these tools, a more thorough understanding of how they change vegetation structure and habitat suitability for animals is necessary.The southeastern U.S. is a diversity hot-spot for amphibians, many of which require ephemeral wetlands embedded in longleaf pine uplands for the aquatic phase of their life cycle. Amphibian diversity has been declining in recent decades and habitat loss/degradation has been cited as one of the leading causes. Although often overlooked in studies of fire ecology, the ephemeral wetlands required by many amphibians are also fire-dependent habitats that have been negatively impacted by lack of fire. To understand how disturbance interacts with wetland vegetation and aquatic-phase amphibians, three disturbance treatments meant to mimic the effects of natural disturbance on vegetation structure were applied randomly to 28 dry ephemeral wetlands in the Lower Coastal Plain of South Carolina, U.S. The treatments consisted of early growing-season prescribed fire, mechanical vegetation removal (a proposed fire surrogate), and a combination of mechanical removal plus fire; some sites were left untreated for reference. Vegetation structure was quantified and amphibian assemblages were monitored before and after treatments. ...
    • Relation:
      CFE0005015; ucf:49994; http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005015
    • الدخول الالكتروني :
      http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005015
    • Rights:
      public 2013-12-15
    • الرقم المعرف:
      edsbas.6CF4209A