Search results for "VEGETATION SUCCESSION"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Effects of vegetation at different succession stages on soil properties and water flow in sandy soil

2015

The effects of vegetation at different succession stages on soil properties and water flow were assessed in sandy soil at 3 experimental sites near Sekule village (southwest Slovakia). Site S1 was a pioneer site dominated by mosses, site S2 was an early successional stage with a thin stand of grasses, and site S3 was an early successional stage (more advanced compared to the previous), richer in species, with a denser stand of grasses. It was found that vegetation at different succession stages affected soil properties and water flow in sandy soil, but the order of changes in some soil properties and water penetration depths were different from the order of succession stages.

Water flowSoil biodiversitywater flowSoil sciencePlant ScienceEcological successionBiochemistryGeneticSoil retrogression and degradationGeneticssandy soilwater repellencyMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicssoil propertieHydrologyfood and beveragesSoil morphologyCell BiologySoil typeEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicvegetation successionPedogenesisEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonAnimal Science and ZoologyBiologia
researchProduct

Integrating Decomposers, Methane-Cycling Microbes and Ecosystem Carbon Fluxes Along a Peatland Successional Gradient in a Land Uplift Region

2021

AbstractPeatlands are carbon dioxide (CO2) sinks that, in parallel, release methane (CH4). The peatland carbon (C) balance depends on the interplay of decomposer and CH4-cycling microbes, vegetation, and environmental conditions. These interactions are susceptible to the changes that occur along a successional gradient from vascular plant-dominated systems to Sphagnum moss-dominated systems. Changes similar to this succession are predicted to occur from climate change. Here, we investigated how microbial and plant communities are interlinked with each other and with ecosystem C cycling along a successional gradient on a boreal land uplift coast. The gradient ranged from shoreline to meadows…

DYNAMICSPeatecosystem respirationmethane emissionSphagnumCOMMUNITY COMPOSITIONDecomposerCO2 EXCHANGEbakteeritmethanotrophsmethanogensturvemaatBogFUNGALBiomass (ecology)geography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyFUNCTIONAL TYPEShiilen kiertofood and beveragesactinobacteriaFEN ECOSYSTEMprimary paludification1181 Ecology evolutionary biologymicrobial communityEcosystem respirationsienetWATER-LEVEL DRAWDOWNTERMmetaaniEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystembiomassa (ekologia)PLANT-COMMUNITIESVEGETATION SUCCESSION1172 Environmental sciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsgeographymicrobial biomassbiology.organism_classificationpeatland developmentmaankohoaminenmikrobistoMicrobial population biologyACTINOBACTERIAL COMMUNITIEShiilinielutEnvironmental sciencefungipeatland development.Ecosystems
researchProduct

Pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry of soil organic matter extracted from a Brazilian mangrove and Spanish salt marshes

2009

The soil organic matter (SOM) extracted under different vegetation types from a Brazilian mangrove (Pai Matos Island, São Paulo State) and from three Spanish salt marshes (Betanzos Ría and Corrubedo Natural Parks, Galícia, and the Albufera Natural Park, Valencia) was investigated by pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS). The chemical variation was larger in SOM from the Spanish marshes than in the SOM of the Brazilian mangroves, possibly because the marshes included sites with both tidal and nontidal variation, whereas the mangrove forest underwent just tidal variation. Thus, plant-derived organic matter was better preserved under permanently anoxic environments. Moreove…

MarshSoil ScienceWetlandEarth System ScienceVegetation typeparticle-size fractionsrothamsted classical experimentsOrganic matteracidschemistry.chemical_classificationnw spaingeographyWIMEKgeography.geographical_feature_categorychemical characterizationEcologyhumic substancesSoil organic matterVegetationmass-spectrometrysao-paulovegetation successionmolecular compositionchemistrySalt marshLeerstoelgroep AardsysteemkundeEnvironmental scienceMangrove
researchProduct

Relationship between the seed rain and the establishment of vegetation in two areas abandoned after peat harvesting

1987

In this study the number and species composition of diaspores dispersing into two newly abandoned peat harvesting areas in Finland were investigated. In an area abandoned six years earlier a total of 2978 living seeds m−2, representing 18 species, was captured by using water-filled traps during two summers. In a one-year-old succession area the total number of living seeds m−2 was 2241, representing 16 plant species. The soil seed banks were found to be empty of viable seeds. In neither area there appeared to be any relation between number of dispersing seeds and of plant individuals of the same species in the pioneer vegetation. It is suggested that unfavourable conditions on the soil surf…

PeatGerminationVegetation successionEcologySeedlingPlant speciesfood and beveragesEcological successionSoil surfaceVegetationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcography
researchProduct