Human Disturbance Reduces Plant Species Diversity and Stability of Phyllostachys pubescens Forests

Authors

  • Ji Lei State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture, Zhejiang A & F University, Hangzhou, 311300, China
  • Rong Chen State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture, Zhejiang A & F University, Hangzhou, 311300, China
  • Renyi Gui State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture, Zhejiang A & F University, Hangzhou, 311300, China
  • Jianshuang Gao State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, 210008, China

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30564/re.v2i1.1181

Abstract

Plant species diversity is an important index reflecting the functional complexity and stability of ecosystems. Human activity can completely alter plant species diversity and cause serious degradation of ecosystems but its impact on bamboo forest still lacks of systematic evaluation. In this study, we performed a field investigation to reveal the influences of human disturbances on the plant diversity and stability of Moso bamboo forests at Southern China. The selected bamboo fields contained different intensities of human activities that could be classified as slight, moderate and severe disturbance level. Species richness index S, Shannon-Wienner index H, Simpson index D, Pielou index Jsw, community similarity index IS and community stability index were employed to quantitatively evaluate the plant species diversity and stability. The survey revealed that there were 203 species belonging to 83 families and 108 genera in Moso bamboo forests. The number of plant species in the Moso bamboo forests decreased with the increasing of disturbance intensity. The species diversity indexes generally followed the order of slight > moderate > severe disturbance, as well as the richness index S, Shannon-Wienner index H and Pielou index Jsw. The similarity and species stability of the bamboo forest communities also decreased with the increase of the disturbance intensity. Under the severe disturbance, plant species replacement occurred strongly. The obtained results provide some a guideline for the sustainable management of bamboo forest.

Keywords:

Human disturbance, Bamboo forest, Species diversity, Stability

References

[1] Altamirano, A., Field, R., Cayuela, L.. Woody species diversity in temperate andean forests: the need for new conservation strategies. Biological Conservation, 2010, 143(9): 2080-2091.

[2] Katovai, E., Burley, A.L., Mayfield, M.M.. Understory plant species and functional diversity in the degraded wet tropical forests of Kolombangara Island, Solomon Islands. Biological Conservation, 2012, 145(1): 214-224.

[3] Nagaike, T., Kamitani, T., Nakashizuka, T.. Plant species diversity in abandoned coppice forests in a temperate deciduous forest area of central Japan. Plant Ecology, 2003, 166(1): 63-74.

[4] Pickett, S.T.A., White, P.S.. The Ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics. Science, 1985, 230(4724): 434-435.

[5] Slik, J.W.F., Verburg, R.W., Kessler, P.J.A.. Effects of fire and selective logging on the tree species composition of lowland dipterocarp forest in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Biodiversity & Conservation, 2002, 11: 85–98.

[6] Brown, K.A., Gurevitch, J.. Long-term impacts of logging on forest diversity in Madagascar. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2004, 101: 6045–6049.

[7] Saha, S., Howe, H.F.. Species composition and fire in a dry deciduous forest. Ecology, 2003, 84: 3118– 3123.

[8] Sarahm, O., Markw, S., Ileana, V.. Responses to fire in selected tropical dry forest trees. Biotropica, 2010, 38(5): 592-598.

[9] Mcevoy, P.M., Flexen, M., McAdam, J.H.. The effect of livestock grazing on ground flora in broadleaf woodlands in Northern Ireland. Forest Ecology & Management, 2006, 225: 39–50.

[10] Dufour-Dror, J.M.. Influence of cattle grazing on the density of oak seedlings and saplings in a Tabor oak forest in Israel. Acta Oecologica, 2007, 31(2): 223- 228.

[11] Bertin, R.I.. Losses of native plant species from Worcester, Massachusetts. Rhodora, 2002, 104: 325– 349.

[12] Standley, L.A.. Flora of Needham, Massachusetts 100 years of floristic change. Rhodora, 2003, 105: 354–378.

[13] DeCandido, R., Muir, A.A., Gargiullo, M.B.. A first approximation of the historial and extant vascular flora of New York City: implications for native plant species conservation. The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society, 2004, 131(3): 243-251

[14] Engstrom, D.R., Swain, E.B., Kingston, J.C.. A paleolimnological record of human disturbance from Harvey’s Lake, Vermont: geochemistry, pigments and diatoms. Freshwater Biology, 1985, 15: 261–88.

[15] Aber, J.D., Melillo, J.M., Nadelhoffer, K.J., Pastor, J., Boone, R.. Factors controlling nitrogen cycling and nitrogen saturation in northern temperate forest ecosystems. Ecological Applications, 1991, 1: 303–315.

[16] Sullivan, T.J., McMartin, B., Charles, D.F.. Re-examination of the role of landscape change in the acidification of lakes in the Adirondack Mountains, New York. Science of the Total Environment, 1996, 183: 231-248.

[17] Brush, G.S.. The changing global environment. Elsevier, 1994.

[18] Foster, D.R.. Land-Use History (1730-1990) and Vegetation Dynamics in Central New England, USA. Journal of Ecology, 1992, 80(4): 753-771.

[19] Egler, F.E.. Berkshire plateau vegetation, Massachusetts. Ecological Monographs, 1940,10: 145–192.

[20] Whitney, G.G.. Multiple pattern analysis of an oldgrowth hemlock–white pine–northern hardwood stand. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1990, 117: 39–47.

[21] White, M.A., Mladenoff, D.J.. Old-growth forest landscape transition from pre-European settlement for present. Landscape Ecology, 1994, 9: 191–205.

[22] Palik, B.J., Pregitzer, K.S.. A comparison of presettlement and present-day forests on two bigtooth aspen-dominated landscapes in northern Lower Michigan. American Midland Naturalist , 1992, 127: 327–38.

[23] Abrams, M.D., Ruffner, C.M.. Physiographic analysis of witnesstree distribution (1765–1798) and present forest cover through north central Pennsylvania. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 1995, 25: 659–668.

[24] Foster, D.R., Motzkin, G., Slater, B.. Land-use history as long-term broad-scale disturbance: regional forest dynamics in central New England. Ecosystems, 1998, 1: 96-119.

[25] Solé, R.V., Alonso, D., Saldaña, J.. Habitat fragmentation and biodiversity collapse in neutral communities. Ecological Complexity, 2004, 1(1): 65-75.

[26] Ram, Jeet, Kumar, A., Bhatt, J.. Plant diversity in six forest types of Uttaranchal, Central Himalaya, India. Current Science, 2004, 86: 975-978.

[27] Banda, T., Schwartz, M.W., Caro, T.. Woody vegetation structure and composition along a protection gradient in a miombo ecosystem of western Tanzania. Forest Ecology & Management, 2006, 230: 179- 185.

[28] Muboko, N., Chigumira, T., Mashapa, C., Gandiwa, E., Chibememe, G., Muposhi, V.K.. Impacts of Wood Poaching on Vegetation Structure and Composition in Mukuvisi Woodland, Zimbabwe. Journal of Environmental Protection, 2014, 5: 156–163.

[29] Tilman, D.. Causes, consequences and ethics of biodiversity. Nature, 2000, 405(6783): 208-211.

[30] Mcgrandy-steed, J., Harris, PM., Morin, P.J.. Biodiversity regulates ecosystem predictability. Nature, 1997, 390: 162-165.

[31] Loreau, M.. Biodixersity and ecosystem functioning: recent theoretical advance. Oikos, 2000, 91: 3-17.

[32] Upadhyay, R.K., Iyengar, S.R.K., Rai, V.. Stability and complexity in ecological systems. Chaos Solitons & Fractals, 2000, 11(4), 533-542.

[33] Tilman, D.. Biodiversity: population versus ecosystem stability. Ecology, 1996, 77(2): 350-363.

[34] May, R.M.. Stability and complexity in model ecosystems. IEEE Transactions on Systems Man & Cybernetics, 2007, 8(10): 779-779.

[35] Peng, Z., Lu, Y., Li, L., Zhao, Q., Feng, Q., Gao, Z.. The draft genome of the fast-growing non-timber forest species moso bamboo (phyllostachys heterocycla). Nature Genetics, 2013, 45(4): 1-2.

[36] Gui, R., Leng, H., Zhuang, S., Zheng, K., Fang, W.. Aluminum tolerance in moso bamboo (Phyllostachys pubescens). The Botanical Review, 2011, 77(3): 214- 222.

[37] Fan, Y.R., Chen, S.L., Lin, H., Yang, Q.P., Hong, Y.C., Guo, Z.W.. Effects of anthropogenic disturbance measures on plant diversity of understory vegetation in moso bamboo forests. Advanced Materials Research, 2013, 726-731: 4288-4293.

[38] Xu, Q.F., Jiang, P.K., Wu, J.S., Zhou, G.M., Shen, R.F., Fuhrmann, J.J.. Bamboo invasion of native broadleaf forest modified soil microbial communities and diversity. Biological Invasions, 2015, 17(1): 433- 444.

[39] Wu, Z.M.. Study on Plant Diversity of Moso Bamboo Stands and Its Procection Strategies. Doctoral thesis. Chinese Academy of Forestry, 2012. (in Chinese)

[40] Liu, G.L.. Study on the Mechanism Maintaining Long-term Productivity of Bamboo Forest. Doctoral thesis. Chinese Academy of Forestry, 2009. (in Chinese)

[41] Shannon, C.E., Weaver, W. The mathematical theory of communication. Bell Labs Technical Journal, 1950, 3(9): 31-32.

[42] Pielou, E.C.. The measurement of diversity in different types of biological collections. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 1966, 13: 131–144.

[43] Margalef, R.. Information theory in ecology. General Systems, 1958, 3: 36–71.

[44] Sørensen T.. A method of establishing group of equal amplitude in plant sociology based on similarity of species content. Det Kong Danske Videnskabernes Selskab Biologiske Skrifter (Copenhagen), 1948, 5: 1–34.

[45] Spurr, S.H.. Review: Methods of Vegetation Study. Forest Science, 1959, 5(4): 364-364(1).

[46] Guo, Q.Q., Zhang, W.H., Cao, X.P.. Establishment of an evaluation model of the forest community stability based on fuzzy synthetic evaluation: a case study of main forest communities in huanglong mountains. Scientia Silvae Sinicae, 2009, 45(10): 19-24.

[47] Tilman, D.. Competition and biodiversity in spatially structured habitats. Ecology, 1994, 75(1): 2-16.

[48] Oyugi, J.O., Brown, J.S., Whelan, C.J.. Effects of human disturbance on composition and structure of brachystegia, woodland in arabuko-sokoke forest, kenya. African Journal of Ecology, 2008, 46(3): 374- 383.

[49] Giliba, R.A., Mafuru, C.S., Paul, M., Kayombo, C.J., Kashindye, A.M., Chirenje, L.I.. Human activities influencing deforestation on meru catchment forest reserve, tanzania. Journal of Human Ecology, 2011, 33(1): 17-20.

[50] Addo-Fordjour, P., Obeng, S., Addo, M.G., Akyeampong, S.. Effects of human disturbances and plant invasion on liana community structure and relationship with trees in the tinte bepo forest reserve, ghana. Forest Ecology & Management, 2009, 258(5): 728- 734.

[51] Whitmore, T.C.. Tropical rain forests of the far east. Elsevier, 1984.

[52] Campanello, P.I., Genoveva Gatti, M., Ares, A., Montti, L., Goldstein, G.. Tree regeneration and microclimate in a liana and bamboo-dominated semideciduous Atlantic forest. Forest Ecology & Management, 2007, 252: 108–117.

[53] Larpkern, P., Moe, S.R., Totland, S.R.. The effects of environmental variables and human disturbance on woody species richness and diversity in a bamboo-deciduous forest in northeastern Thailand, Ecological Research, 2009, 24: 147–156.

[54] Larpkern, P., Moe, S.R., Totland, S.R.. Bamboo dominance reduces in a disturbed tropical forest. Oecologia, 2011, 165: 161–168.

[55] Gratzer, G., Rai, P.B., Glatzel, G.. The inXuence of the bamboo Yushania microphylla on regeneration of Abies densa in Central Bhutan. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 1999, 29: 1518–1527.

[56] Abe, M., Izaki, J., Miguchi, H., Masaki, T., Makita, A., Nakashizuka, T.. The effects of Sasa and canopy gap formation on tree regeneration in an old beech forest. Journal of Vegetation Science, 2002, 13: 565– 574.

[57] Narukawa, Y., Yamamoto, S.. Effects of dwarf bamboo (Sasa sp.) and forest floor microsites on conifer seedling recruitment in a subalpine forest, Japan. Forest Ecology & Management, 2002, 163: 61–70.

[58] Griscom, B.W., Ashton, P.M.S.. Bamboo control of forest succession: Guadua sarcocarpa in southeastern Peru. Forest Ecology & Management, 2003, 175: 445–454.

[59] Guilherme, F.A.G., Oliveira-Filho, A.T., Appolinário, V., Bearzoti, E.. Effects of flooding regime and woody bamboos on tree community dynamics in a section of tropical semideciduous forest in South-Eastern Brazil. Plant Ecology, 2004, 174: 19–36.

[60] Taylor, A.H., Jinyan, H., ShiQiang, Z.. Canopy tree development and undergrowth bamboo dynamics in old-growth Abies-Betula. Forest Ecology and Management, 2004, 200: 347-360.

[61] Taylor, A.H., Jang, S.W., Zhao, L.J., Liang, C.P., Miao, C.J., Huang, J.Y.. Regeneration patterns and tree species coexistence in old-growth Abies-Picea forests in southwestern China. Forest Ecology and Management, 2006, 223(1): 303-317.

[62] Tabarelli, M., Mantovani, W.. Gap-phase regeneration in a tropical montane forest: the eVects of gap structure and bamboo species. Plant Ecology, 2000, 148: 149–155.

[63] Hao, J.F., Wang, D.Y., Li, Y., Yao, X.L., Zhang, Y.B., Zhan, M.C.. Effects of human disturbance on species diversity of phoebe zhennan communitis in jinfengshan moutain in western sichuan. Acta Ecologica Sinica, 2014.

[64] Wu, Z.M.. Study on Plant Diversity of Moso Bamboo Stands and Its Procection Strategies. Doctoral thesis. Chinese Academy of Forestry, 2012. (in Chinese)

Downloads

How to Cite

Lei, J., Chen, R., Gui, R., & Gao, J. (2019). Human Disturbance Reduces Plant Species Diversity and Stability of Phyllostachys pubescens Forests. Research in Ecology, 2(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.30564/re.v2i1.1181

Issue

Article Type

Articles