Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2950597989> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2950597989 endingPage "207" @default.
- W2950597989 startingPage "198" @default.
- W2950597989 abstract "A major issue in the management of New Zealand’s remaining native forests is the extent to which the presence of introduced deer is compatible with national conservation and ecosystem restoration goals. Deer greatly reduce the abundance of their preferred plant species in forest understories, even when present at low densities. Recent work in other temperate regions has found that coarse woody debris resulting from treefalls shelters regeneration of species that are heavily browsed elsewhere in the forest. We asked if a similar effect occurs in lowland New Zealand forest dominated by Beilschmiedia tawa, comparing sapling abundance of preferred tree species in various microenvironments in two old-growth forests <30 km apart growing in near-identical physical environments—one inhabited by introduced fallow deer (Dama dama), the other from which ungulates and other introduced mammals were excluded c. 13 years earlier. Species composition of sapling communities growing within fallen tree crowns and on woody debris in treefall gaps did not differ significantly between the two forests; in contrast, the species composition of sapling communities elsewhere in treefall gaps and on understorey plots differed strongly between sites with and without deer. Saplings of species preferred by deer were equally abundant within fallen tree crowns in the two forests, demonstrating the effectiveness of tree crowns in sheltering palatable species from deer browsing; saplings growing on coarse woody debris in treefall gaps were also of similar abundance in the two forests. However, abundance of preferred species’ saplings on understorey plots was 10-fold lower at sites with deer, and their abundance in parts of treefall gaps unprotected by woody debris was 4-fold lower. Saplings of most other species did not differ significantly in abundance between sites with and without deer, in either understorey or treefall gap environments. Results suggest that in old-growth forest dominated by B. tawa, coarse woody debris associated with treefall gaps enables persistence of woody species that deer largely remove from the rest of the forest mosaic. Useful follow-up research could include modelling of the long-term impact of this effect on forest composition, and determination of the extent of its occurrence in other forest types." @default.
- W2950597989 created "2019-06-27" @default.
- W2950597989 creator A5042450586 @default.
- W2950597989 creator A5052046414 @default.
- W2950597989 date "2019-09-01" @default.
- W2950597989 modified "2023-09-29" @default.
- W2950597989 title "Woody debris in treefall gaps shelters palatable plant species from deer browsing, in an old-growth temperate forest" @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1563480203 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1750422247 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1966536260 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1981827347 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1983661028 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1989805708 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W1995071119 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2004438862 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2008201594 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2013857368 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2020425839 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2020868206 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2038156387 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2067835234 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2075755760 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2076257218 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2076978601 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2083240817 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2085955196 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2089808500 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2094049111 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2096348003 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2100435949 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2108735156 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2116812560 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2119259345 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2119327158 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2121794661 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2125444457 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2126891096 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2129470558 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2134354065 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2141731740 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2143175452 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2145529459 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2148449574 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2153046997 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2169378382 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2283935485 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2322693261 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2333945983 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2419618068 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W2518580831 @default.
- W2950597989 cites W4240863263 @default.
- W2950597989 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.06.010" @default.
- W2950597989 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2950597989 type Work @default.
- W2950597989 sameAs 2950597989 @default.
- W2950597989 citedByCount "9" @default.
- W2950597989 countsByYear W29505979892020 @default.
- W2950597989 countsByYear W29505979892022 @default.
- W2950597989 countsByYear W29505979892023 @default.
- W2950597989 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2950597989 hasAuthorship W2950597989A5042450586 @default.
- W2950597989 hasAuthorship W2950597989A5052046414 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C101000010 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C110872660 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C139669111 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C185933670 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C188442384 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C192158950 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C77077793 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C81461190 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C83873828 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConcept C92494378 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C101000010 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C110872660 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C139669111 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C185933670 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C188442384 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C18903297 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C192158950 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C77077793 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C81461190 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C83873828 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C86803240 @default.
- W2950597989 hasConceptScore W2950597989C92494378 @default.
- W2950597989 hasLocation W29505979891 @default.
- W2950597989 hasOpenAccess W2950597989 @default.
- W2950597989 hasPrimaryLocation W29505979891 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W1563480203 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W1963836305 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W2133324233 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W2569207531 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W2792713704 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W2950597989 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W3167636135 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W4211167435 @default.
- W2950597989 hasRelatedWork W4232772912 @default.