Unlabelled: Resilience of plant communities to disturbance is supported by multiple mechanisms, including ecological legacies affecting propagule availability, species' environmental tolerances, and biotic interactions. Understanding the relative importance of these mechanisms for plant community resilience supports predictions of where and how resilience will be altered with disturbance. We tested mechanisms underlying resilience of forests dominated by black spruce () to fire disturbance across a heterogeneous forest landscape in the Northwest Territories, Canada. We combined surveys of naturally regenerating seedlings at 219 burned plots with experimental manipulations of ecological legacies via seed addition of four tree species and vertebrate exclosures to limit granivory and herbivory at 30 plots varying in moisture and fire severity. Black spruce recovery was greatest where it dominated pre-fire, at wet sites with deep residual soil organic layers, and fire conditions of low soil or canopy combustion and longer return intervals. Experimental addition of seed indicated all species were seed-limited, emphasizing the importance of propagule legacies. Black spruce and birch () recruitment were enhanced with vertebrate exclusion. Our combination of observational and experimental studies demonstrates black spruce is vulnerable to effects of increased fire activity that erode ecological legacies. Moreover, black spruce relies on wet areas with deep soil organic layers where other species are less competitive. However, other species can colonize these areas if enough seed is available or soil moisture is altered by climate change. Testing mechanisms underlying species' resilience to disturbance aids predictions of where vegetation will transform with effects of climate change.
Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10021-022-00772-7.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10021-022-00772-7 | DOI Listing |
Mycologia
January 2025
Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology, Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University Greifswald, Soldmannstr. 15, Greifswald D-17489, Germany.
We describe a new species, (Myxomycetes), collected from a microhabitat new for myxomycetes: stem wounds of coniferous trees (Norway spruce) where the resin is overgrown with a community of resinicolous fungi. The 80 known collections come from the Vosges (France), the Black Forest (Germany), Swabian Alp (Germany), and several localities in Denmark and Norway. Observations, but as well as metabarcoding of substrate samples with fungal (ITS [internal transcribed spacer]), bacterial (16S rDNA), and myxomycete (18S nuc rDNA) primers from eight trunks, revealed the new myxomycete to co-occur with resin-degrading ascomycetes ().
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October 2024
Comprehensive Clinical Trials Unit at UCL, Institute of Clinical Trials and Methodology, University College London, London, UK.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
October 2024
International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775-7340.
At the northern high latitudes, rapid warming, associated changes in the hydrological cycle, and rising atmospheric CO concentrations, [CO], are observed at present. Under rapid environmental changes, it is important to understand the current and future trajectories of the CO budget in high-latitude ecosystems. In this study, we present the importance of anomalous wet conditions and rising [CO] on the long-term CO budget based on two decades (2003-2022) of quasicontinuous measurements of CO flux at a poorly drained black spruce forest on permafrost peat in interior Alaska.
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November 2024
Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada, 490 de La Couronne, Québec, QC G1K 9A9, Canada.
Cancers (Basel)
September 2024
Abramson Cancer Center, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Background: Urothelial carcinoma (UC) is one of the most common cancers diagnosed worldwide. However, minority populations, such as female, elder, and Black patients, may have disparate outcomes and are commonly neglected in randomized prospective trials. This review aims to study the relationship between age, sex, and race on urothelial cancer prognosis, particularly focusing on contemporary therapy and its effect on overall survival.
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