issue 2
Davidsonia - Volume 19, Number 2, April 2008
Davidsonia - A Journal of Botanical Garden Science
Editorial - Davidsonia Volume 19, Number 2
Editor, Iain Taylor writes about man-made and natural disturbances to ecosystems and the need to understand the impacts of these disturbances.
How to grow, propagate and kill some of the native plants in the Kluane region, southwestern Yukon
During over 15 years of plant ecological research in the Kluane region of southwestern Yukon, our studies required us to grow, propagate, and sometimes kill, native plants for experimental purposes. Here we present observations on germinating, growing, propagating and transplanting some of the common native plant species in the Kluane region.
Impact of a severe flood on canopy composition, tree regeneration, and ground flora of the ... Red River, Canada
The 1997 Red River flood afforded a valuable opportunity for studying the impact of an infrequent severe disturbance on gallery forests. In 1997 and 2002 we sampled two sites protected and two sites unprotected by a flood control structure near Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada using three 150 m transects in the lower floodplain (n = 45 quadrats per site). The mature canopy of unprotected sites consisted of Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marsh. and Ulmus americana L. at low cover whereas protected sites contained five tree species. Regeneration data suggest F. pennsylvanica will continue to dominate in unprotected sites, with treefall providing opportunities for pioneer flood specialists like Salix amygdaloides Anderss. Fewer gap openings occurred in protected sites, in which Acer negundo L. and F. pennsylvanica will likely become co-dominants.
Understorey taxa normally able to survive the moderate disturbance associated with seasonal inundation of the lower floodplain of protected sites succumbed to the harsh conditions in the unprotected sites. Many were knocked back or eliminated by 2002, with greater reductions in richness and diversity in unprotected sites. Ruderals were promoted in unprotected sites but most were less prominent by 2002. Although several taxa, e.g., Vitis riparia Michx. and Bidens frondosa L. had significantly higher cover in protected sites by 2002, Xanthium strumarium L. and Polygonum amphibium L. were the only understorey species with significantly higher cover in the unprotected sites. Correspondence analysis indicated flood protection generated differing trajectories, with site differences contributing to variable successional outcomes.
Book Reviews - Davidsonia Volume 19, Number 2
Senescence processes in plants edited by Susheng Gan, Annual Plant Reviews 26 (2007) Blackwell Publishing
Ltd, Oxford, UK; Ames, Iowa: and Carlton, Australia; and The Physiology of Crop Yield, 2nd Ed. 2006, Robert KM Hay and John R Porter, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, UK; Ames, IA; Carlton,Australia are reviewed.
Gleanings - Davidsonia Volume 19, Number 2
Notes on papers (some technical and others less so) that may be of interest.
