Collaborative Research: Do ecological feedbacks across trophic levels affect alternative stable states and restoration of tropical forests?
合作研究:跨营养级的生态反馈是否会影响热带森林的替代稳定状态和恢复?
基本信息
- 批准号:1556856
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 26.15万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2016
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2016-09-15 至 2022-07-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
A substantial portion of the Earth's wildlands have been degraded by past land use, species extinctions and invasion by non-native species. Degraded ecosystems often do not provide the same important services to humans as intact systems - including such services as erosion prevention, flood control, and support for wildlife. This research addresses tropical forest ecosystems that have been degraded by past forest clearing and the loss of native fruit-dispersing birds and asks why these forests are not returning to native species dominance despite the cessation of the original disturbances that caused their degradation. It evaluates the interacting roles of widespread invasive pasture grasses, high levels of soil nitrogen, and loss of important native species (birds, a previously dominant native tree, and soil microorganisms) in stalling forest recovery. The work also addresses why the common restoration method of mass replanting of a single native tree species does not lead to recovery of native tropical forest. This research will provide badly needed information on growth requirements for endemic Hawaiian forest species and will help direct restoration actions to insure better success in recreating diverse native forests, which may result in cost savings for future restoration projects. This project will also train local students who will become the future stewards of these ecosystems.Insight into the theory of alternative stable states, which has come to dominate discussions of ecosystem degradation and restoration, will be gained with this research. A key assumption of this theory is that current conditions create feedbacks or priority effects that stall change, thus hindering recovery of ecosystems that exist in a degraded state. Most research on this topic focuses on the role of particular individual feedbacks in slowing ecosystem change. Using degraded montane tropical forests in Hawaii as a study system, this research addresses the role of multiple feedbacks, including cross-trophic level ones, in interfering with, or conversely allowing, community development away from a seemingly non-transient degraded state. An interdisciplinary team will address the importance and interactions of avian seed dispersal, overstory tree composition, understory grass competition with dispersing seedlings, and plant-soil and mycorrhizal feedbacks in maintaining persistent degraded conditions. The research tests specific interactions between birds, plants, nitrogen availability and mycorrhizae using manipulative field experiments, greenhouse feedback studies and ecological modeling. Together the team will work to determine what combinations of management actions are needed to accelerate ecosystem change in the direction desired by land managers.
由于过去的土地利用、物种灭绝和非本土物种的入侵,地球上相当大一部分荒地已经退化。退化的生态系统往往不能为人类提供与完整系统相同的重要服务--包括防止侵蚀、防洪和支持野生动物等服务。这项研究讨论了由于过去的森林砍伐和本地散播水果的鸟类的丧失而退化的热带森林生态系统,并询问为什么这些森林没有恢复到本地物种主导地位,尽管导致它们退化的原始干扰已经停止。它评估了广泛的入侵牧草、高水平的土壤氮以及重要的本土物种(鸟类、以前占主导地位的本土树木和土壤微生物)的丧失在阻碍森林恢复方面的相互作用。这项工作还阐述了为什么大规模重新种植单一本土树种的常见恢复方法不会导致本土热带森林的恢复。这项研究将提供有关夏威夷特有森林物种生长需求的迫切需要的信息,并将有助于指导恢复行动,以确保更好地成功地重建多样化的原生林,这可能会为未来的恢复项目节省成本。该项目还将培训当地学生,他们将成为这些生态系统的未来管理者。通过这项研究,将获得对替代稳定状态理论的见解,该理论已成为生态系统退化和恢复的主导讨论。这一理论的一个关键假设是,目前的条件产生了阻碍变化的反馈或优先效应,从而阻碍了以退化状态存在的生态系统的恢复。关于这一主题的大多数研究都集中在特定个体反馈在减缓生态系统变化中的作用。这项研究以夏威夷退化的山地热带森林为研究系统,探讨了多种反馈,包括跨营养水平的反馈,在干扰或相反地允许群落发展远离看似非瞬时退化状态方面的作用。一个跨学科的团队将研究鸟类种子传播、地上乔木组成、林下草与分散苗木的竞争以及植物-土壤和菌根反馈在维持持续退化条件方面的重要性和相互作用。这项研究通过操纵性田间实验、温室反馈研究和生态模型来测试鸟类、植物、氮素有效性和菌根之间的特定相互作用。该小组将共同努力,确定需要哪些管理行动的组合,以加速生态系统朝着土地管理者所希望的方向变化。
项目成果
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