Response of a native bamboo [Arundinaria gigantea (Walt.) Muhl.] in a wind-disturbed forest

نویسندگان

  • Paul R. Gagnon
  • William J. Platt
  • Barry Moser
چکیده

Numerous bamboos are known to form extensive single-species stands, including species in the United States. Formerly prominent in the southeastern US, canebrakes are dense stands of the bamboos collectively called ‘‘cane’’ [Arundinaria (Michx)]. Canebrakes are now a critically endangered component of the bottomland hardwood forest ecosystem. Cane still occurs in its historic range, primarily in small remnant patches. A poor understanding of the ecological processes that generated large canebrakes limits their restoration and management. We hypothesize that cane’s spreading clonal structure enables these bamboos to persist beneath a forest canopy and then respond rapidly to large-scale wind disturbances. We quantified patterns of clonal growth in one cane species, ‘‘giant cane’’ [Arundinaria gigantea (Walt.) Muhl.], in a very large tornado-generated canopy gap and in surrounding bottomland hardwood forest in Louisiana. We tested these four hypotheses over a 12month study period in the large canopy gap: (1) production of new culms should be greater, (2) clonal expansion should be greater, (3) culm damage rate should be reduced, and (4) culm size should be reduced compared to giant cane stands under forest canopy. We found that new culm production in tornado-blowdown plots was twice that in forest plots. Accordingly, culms were younger on average in the tornado blowdown than under forest. Rate of clonal expansion was similar between the two environments, suggesting clonal spread was not disturbance-dependent. With fewer branch-fall impacts, culms in the tornado blowdown were less often damaged. Culms were smaller in tornadoblowdown plots than in forest plots. Giant cane’s clonal plasticity should enable it to persist in old-growth bottomland forests by responding to local light conditions. Genets should increase culm production in small gaps and senesce as gaps fill in. Giant cane stands could thereby shift location over time. Wind disturbance that opens forest canopy should trigger redevelopment of denser stands that could merge with other expanding stands into expansive canebrakes. Giant cane’s clonal ecology may be a useful model for understanding spreading bamboos and other forest-growing clonal perennials. # 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Reproductive and seedling ecology of a semelparous native bamboo (Arundinaria gigantea, Poaceae)

GAGNON, P. R. AND W. J. PLATT (Louisiana State University, Department of Biological Sciences, 202 Life Sciences Building, Baton Rouge LA 70803). Reproductive and seedling ecology of a semelparous native bamboo (Arundinaria gigantea, Poaceae). J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 135: 309–316. 2008.—Canebrakes were monodominant stands of bamboo once common in bottomlands throughout the southeastern U.S. They wer...

متن کامل

Effects of Nitrogen and Moisture Regimes on Arundinaria gigantea (Walt.) Muhl. Seedling Growth

1 Corresponding author: [email protected]; (901) 678-1502; fax: (901) 678-4746 ABSTRACT: A greater than 98% decline in Arundinaria gigantea (Walt.) Muhl. (giant cane or river cane) canebrake communities have resulted in a critically endangered ecosystem. Historical accounts suggest loss of canebrake habitat has resulted in the extirpation (and perhaps extinction) of many species. Thus, caneb...

متن کامل

Multi - year salutary effects of windstorM and fire on river cane

Canebrakes are monodominant stands of cane (Arundinaria gigantea [Walter] Muhl .), a bamboo native to and once prominent in the southeastern USA. Canebrakes were important wildlife habitat within the bottomland hardwood forest ecosystem. They have been reduced in areal coverage by an estimated 98 % since European settlement due to land conversion and the drastic alteration of disturbance regime...

متن کامل

Effect of Light Intensity on Arundinaria gigantea Growth and Physiology

The once dominant Arundinaria gigantea canebrake ecosystems have been reduced to fragmented populations less than 2% of their former extent resulting in a critically endangered ecosystem. Restoration of canebrakes is thus necessary for maintaining and enhancing biodiversity in the southeastern United States. Contemporary fragments of canebrakes are trapped between anthropogenic development and ...

متن کامل

Multiple disturbances accelerate clonal growth in a potentially monodominant bamboo.

Organisms capable of rapid clonal growth sometimes monopolize newly freed space and resources. We hypothesize that sequential disturbances might change short-term clonal demography of these organisms in ways that promote formation of monotypic stands. We examined this hypothesis by studying the clonal response of Arundinaria gigantea (giant cane, a bamboo) to windstorm and fire. We studied gian...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:

دوره   شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2007