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ABSTRACT:

The role of land-use history in major invasions by woody plant species in the northeastern North American landscape

Journal Article

Mosher ES; Silander JA; Latimer AM

2009

Biological Invasions

11

2317-2328

Land-use history as a predictor of invasive alien plant distributions has received little study especially across large spatial and temporal scales. Here we evaluate the importance of land-use history and other environmental characteristics as predictors of the distributions of a suite important invasive woody plant species in the northeastern United States. Using historical aerial photographs we delineated 69 years (1934–2003) of land-use change across a typically heterogeneous 95 km2 landscape. We randomly surveyed over 500 sites for six invasive plant species. We found that land use history patterns strongly affected presence and abundance of the invasive plants as a group but affected some species more than others. Generally past agricultural use favored invasive species whereas intact forest blocks discouraged them. Current land-use trends toward residential/commercial development favor disturbance-adapted species like Celastrus orbiculatus (asiatic bittersweet) and will probably slow the spread of post-agricultural specialists such as Berberis thunbergii (Japanese barberry).

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The Liana Ecology Project is supported by Marquette University and funded in part by the National Science Foundation.

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