FOREST ROADS CAUSE EDGE EFFECTS ON PLANT SPECIES DIVERSITY IN ARTIFICIAL FORESTS

Authors

  • Hiroki Kohmori
  • Tetsuoh Shirota
  • Tetsuo Okano
  • Teruo Arase

Keywords:

Forest Road, Artificial Forest, β Diversity, Edge Effect, Forest Age

Abstract

To evaluate the effects of narrow forest roads on plant species diversity in the forest understory,
we analyzed the relationship between the distance from the forest road and vegetation structure in young and
mature artificial forests of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica). Although exotic species appeared along the
side of the forest road, their appearance frequencies and coverage were very small, suggesting that a decline in
species diversity due to exotic species did not occur. Although an obvious decrease in vegetation coverage and
species number with distance from the forest road was detected in the shrub layer of the young forest, a clear
distance-dependency was not observed in the mature forest. However, even though the effects on local species
number (α diversity) were unclear, replacement of species was detected with distance from the forest road (β
diversity) in association with species’ shade tolerance. This replacement of species improved the overall
diversity of forest (γ diversity). Thus, it was concluded that narrow forest roads can improve species diversity
in artificial forests in association with a diversified environment and the replacement of plant species.

Downloads

Published

2019-02-10

How to Cite

Hiroki Kohmori, Tetsuoh Shirota, Tetsuo Okano, & Teruo Arase. (2019). FOREST ROADS CAUSE EDGE EFFECTS ON PLANT SPECIES DIVERSITY IN ARTIFICIAL FORESTS. GEOMATE Journal, 17(61), 129–134. Retrieved from https://geomatejournal.com/geomate/article/view/2146

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>