Plant richness and composition in hardwood forest understories vary along an acidic deposition and soil-chemical gradient in the northeastern United States

Aims A century of atmospheric deposition of sulfur and nitrogen has acidified soils and undermined the health and recruitment of foundational tree species in the northeastern US. However, effects of acidic deposition on the forest understory plant communities of this region are poorly documented. We...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant and soil 2019-05, Vol.438 (1/2), p.461-477
Hauptverfasser: Zarfos, Michael R., Dovciak, Martin, Lawrence, Gregory B., McDonnell, Todd C., Sullivan, Timothy J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims A century of atmospheric deposition of sulfur and nitrogen has acidified soils and undermined the health and recruitment of foundational tree species in the northeastern US. However, effects of acidic deposition on the forest understory plant communities of this region are poorly documented. We investigated how forest understory plant species composition and richness varied across gradients of acidic deposition and soil acidity in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State. Methods We surveyed understory vegetation and soils in hardwood forests on 20 small watersheds and built models of community composition and richness as functions of soil chemistry, nitrogen and sulfur deposition, and other environmental variables. Results Community composition varied significantly with gradients of acidic deposition, soil acidity, and base cation availability (63% variance explained). Several species increased with soil acidity while others decreased. Understory plant richness decreased significantly with increasing soil acidity ( r  = 0.60). The best multivariate regression model to predict richness ( p  
ISSN:0032-079X
1573-5036
DOI:10.1007/s11104-019-04031-y