Dynamics of Kanuka (kunzea Ericoides) Forest on South Kaipara Spit, New Zealand, and the Impact of Fallow Deer (dama Dama)
نویسنده
چکیده
Exclosure plots established in three separate areas of kanuka (Kunzea ericoides var. ericoides) forest on south Kaipara spit in 1983 to assess the impact of introduced fallow deer (Dama dama) were remeasured in 1993. Kanuka shared canopy dominance with mapou (Myrsine australis), houpara (Pseudopanax lessonii) and mahoe (Melicytus ramiflorus ssp. ramiflorus) in relatively old forest in Lookout Bush, Woodhill, and dominated exclusively in two younger stands at South Head; Coprosma rhamnoides dominated understories throughout. At Lookout Bush cohort senescence continued in kanuka and began in mapou and houpara during the period of the study. Seedling thickets of kanuka self-thinned and were also likely to have been smothered by other species. Massive recruitment of mahoe occurred inside the exclosure, and continued in houpara, mostly outside. Mahoe and another generation of houpara are replacing the existing canopy in the absence of deer, and another generation of kanuka and houpara elsewhere in a partially stalled succession. Canopies are still intact at South Head, and there were no major changes in populations of canopy species. However, similar successional pathways are likely to occur there in future. An influx of highly palatable shrubs, e.g., coastal karamu (Coprosma macrocarpa) and hangehange (Geniostoma rupestre var. ligustrifolium), into collapsing forest in the absence of deer, and their scarcity or absence elsewhere, indicates continuing impoverishment of the understorey as well as the canopy by deer. In the long term it is likely that a variety of broadleaved trees will invade these stands and that tall semi-coastal forest, similar to extant relics on the dunes, will develop. In the meantime, the high conservation value of these stands suggests that a major reduction in the deer population sufficient to allow natural successional changes to proceed unhindered should be a conservation priority for the region. __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
منابع مشابه
Fallow deer impacts on Wakatipu beech forest
This study uses data from forty-nine 20 m × 20 m permanent plots measured in 1976, 1982, 1989 and 1997-2002 in Wakatipu Forest, western Otago. We relate changes in red (Nothofagus fusca), silver (Nothofagus menziesii) and mountain beech (Nothofagus solandri var. cliffortioides) forest vegetation to the presence of fallow deer (Dama dama). Vegetation composition is likely to have been altered pr...
متن کاملA Breeding Program for Farmed Fallow Deer
There is increasing archaeological evidence that deer were being systematically cropped or “ranched” much earlier than has been previously supposed. In the Mediterranean region, fallow deer (Dama danm dama), made a sudden appearance on several islands at the same time as sheep, goats and pigs, and subsequently their bones make up 70 percent of those found at Neolithic sites between 6000 and 200...
متن کاملParasites of captive fallow deer (Dama dama L.) from southern Poland with special emphasis on Ashworthius sidemi.
Fallow deer in Poland is an alien species, with an ambiguous legal status. It is considered both, a game and a farm animal, which introductions in recent years led to a substantial increase of its population. As a representative of cervids, it shares with other free-ranging and domestic ruminants many of gastrointestinal helminths, among them an alien Ashworthius sidemi, the nematode of a high ...
متن کاملSuccessional processes induced by fires on the northern offshore islands of New Zealand
Major trends in forest successions following fires are identified for northern offshore islands of New Zealand. Data are from the author’s observations over several decades, and published descriptions. Islands studied extend from the Cavalli group in the north to the Aldermen group in the south. Their original vegetation was largely destroyed by human-induced fires. Successions that followed we...
متن کاملForage Availability and the Diet of Fallow Deer (dama Dama) in the Blue Mountains, Otago
Fallow deer did not prefer either of the two main canopy species (silver beech, Nothofagus menziesii, and radiata pine, Pinus radiata), or any of the common indigenous shrubs, ferns, herbs and monocotyledons in three habitat types (beech, shrub-hardwood, and exotic forest). They did prefer all the common sub canopy tree species, and these comprised the bulk of diet in all habitats. Broadleaf (G...
متن کامل