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1.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 858, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29988528

ABSTRACT

Given the habitat moisture (air humidity or soil moisture) preferences of many forest bryophytes, we explored whether the depth-to-water (DTW) index, derived from remotely sensed Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data, was related to fine-scale patterns of spatial variation in bryophyte abundance, diversity, and composition. The goal was to assess the utility of the topographic DTW index as a tool to decipher trends in bryophyte assemblages along a site wetness gradient in the boreal mixedwood forest. Discrete Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) data were acquired over the entire Ecosystem Management Emulating Natural Disturbance (EMEND) experimental site located in northwestern Alberta, Canada (56° 46' 13″ N, 118° 22' 28″ W), based on which we calculated a mathematical index of approximate depth to water at or below the soil surface at 1 m resolution using the Wet-Areas Mapping model. Bryophytes (mosses and liverworts) were sampled in permanent sample plots in unmanaged forest stands of varying dominant canopy tree composition. The relationships between DTW and bryophyte cover, richness, diversity, and composition in broadleaf (deciduous)-, mixed, and conifer-dominated boreal forest stands were analyzed using linear mixed-effect models and multivariate analyses. Bryophyte cover was highest in conifer-dominated forest, which occupied the wetter end of the DTW gradient, followed by mixed forest, whereas broadleaf forest, which occupied the drier end of the DTW gradient, had the lowest cover but highest bryophyte diversity. Bryophyte cover in conifer-dominated forests was positively related to site moisture (negatively related to the DTW index). In contrast, bryophyte species richness and diversity were negatively related to site moisture (increased at higher DTW values) in all forest types. DTW explained significant variation in bryophyte species composition in mixed forests, while indicator species analysis identified species with preferences for wet, moist, and dry site conditions in each forest type. Our results corroborate the importance of site moisture as a driver of bryophyte assemblages but, interestingly, there were important differences among forest types, which themselves are distributed across a gradient of site moisture. Our study demonstrates the utility of the topographic DTW index for understanding fine-scale (plot-level) variation in bryophyte assemblages in forested landscapes.

2.
J Environ Manage ; 197: 258-264, 2017 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28391099

ABSTRACT

Winter exploration of oil sands deposits underlying wooded fens mostly eliminates the hummock-hollow topography on drilling pads and the ice roads leading to them, after their abandonment in spring. Recovery of black spruce (Picea mariana (P. Mill.) B.S.P.) and tamarack (Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch) on these disturbed peatlands is thought to depend on the recovery of hummock topography. In late winter, numerous large blocks of frozen peat (1.5 × 1.5 m) were lifted out of the flattened drilling pads and positioned beside their excavated hollows; this was done on six temporary pads. Four years later, the condition of the mounds and the regeneration of conifers from natural seed dispersal were assessed on these elevated mounds compared to adjacent flattened areas of the pads. Then, conifer seedling density was more than five times higher on elevated spots than the mostly flat, flood-prone areas between them, and seedling density was positively related to mound height and strength of seed source. Higher mounds tended to have larger seedlings. Mounds on some of the pads were heavily eroded down; these pads had peat with higher humification, and operationally these pads were also treated in late winter when peat was thawing and fractured into pieces during mound construction. Developing a large volume of elevated substrate that persists until natural hummock-forming mosses can establish is thought necessary for tree recruitment and the recovery of the habitat for the threatened woodland caribou of this region.


Subject(s)
Oil and Gas Fields , Trees/growth & development , Ecosystem , Picea , Seedlings
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