The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress. / Cowden, Reed J.; Wightman, Maxwell G.; Gonzalez-Benecke, Carlos A.

In: New Forests, Vol. 53, 2022, p. 947-965.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cowden, RJ, Wightman, MG & Gonzalez-Benecke, CA 2022, 'The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress', New Forests, vol. 53, pp. 947-965. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4

APA

Cowden, R. J., Wightman, M. G., & Gonzalez-Benecke, C. A. (2022). The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress. New Forests, 53, 947-965. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4

Vancouver

Cowden RJ, Wightman MG, Gonzalez-Benecke CA. The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress. New Forests. 2022;53:947-965. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4

Author

Cowden, Reed J. ; Wightman, Maxwell G. ; Gonzalez-Benecke, Carlos A. / The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress. In: New Forests. 2022 ; Vol. 53. pp. 947-965.

Bibtex

@article{84f6e9db38754976ac2d446bcba0c20a,
title = "The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress",
abstract = "Competition for soil water resources between newly planted Douglas-fir seedlings and aggressive early-seral plants, such as Senecio sylvaticus [L.] (Senecio), can create drought conditions that impact tree seedling physiology, growth, and likelihood of mortality. However, the specific impact of Senecio on soil moisture dynamics and inducement of water stress in newly planted tree seedlings across varying site conditions has not been quantified. This study quantified these interactions at three contrasting sites across the U.S. Pacific Northwest: the Coastal Range, the Cascade foothills, and the fringe of south-central valley of Western Oregon. We tested whether competition between Senecio and Douglas-fir seedlings for soil water resources in areas of high Senecio abundance caused increased water stress in the tree seedlings. Senecio demonstrated a high degree of plasticity across sites increasing its lifespan and shoot:root in response to increased soil water resources. Senecio also had more than twice the root area of influence as Douglas-fir. Overall, greater Senecio abundance was associated with greater soil moisture depletion and this soil moisture depletion was correlated with increased Douglas-fir water stress. The magnitude of this response varied across sites; the dry site had the greatest shifts in Senecio biomass partitioning, the highest observable water depletion, and the greatest amount of Douglas-fir water stress. The presented results can be useful for determining effective forest vegetation management regimes by considering the impact of Senecio presence on Douglas-fir seedling drought stress across different site conditions.",
keywords = "Competition, Invasive species, Reforestation, Vegetation management, Water stress",
author = "Cowden, {Reed J.} and Wightman, {Maxwell G.} and Gonzalez-Benecke, {Carlos A.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
pages = "947--965",
journal = "New Forests",
issn = "0169-4286",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influence of site conditions on Senecio sylvaticus seasonal abundance, soil moisture dynamics, and Douglas-fir seedling water stress

AU - Cowden, Reed J.

AU - Wightman, Maxwell G.

AU - Gonzalez-Benecke, Carlos A.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Competition for soil water resources between newly planted Douglas-fir seedlings and aggressive early-seral plants, such as Senecio sylvaticus [L.] (Senecio), can create drought conditions that impact tree seedling physiology, growth, and likelihood of mortality. However, the specific impact of Senecio on soil moisture dynamics and inducement of water stress in newly planted tree seedlings across varying site conditions has not been quantified. This study quantified these interactions at three contrasting sites across the U.S. Pacific Northwest: the Coastal Range, the Cascade foothills, and the fringe of south-central valley of Western Oregon. We tested whether competition between Senecio and Douglas-fir seedlings for soil water resources in areas of high Senecio abundance caused increased water stress in the tree seedlings. Senecio demonstrated a high degree of plasticity across sites increasing its lifespan and shoot:root in response to increased soil water resources. Senecio also had more than twice the root area of influence as Douglas-fir. Overall, greater Senecio abundance was associated with greater soil moisture depletion and this soil moisture depletion was correlated with increased Douglas-fir water stress. The magnitude of this response varied across sites; the dry site had the greatest shifts in Senecio biomass partitioning, the highest observable water depletion, and the greatest amount of Douglas-fir water stress. The presented results can be useful for determining effective forest vegetation management regimes by considering the impact of Senecio presence on Douglas-fir seedling drought stress across different site conditions.

AB - Competition for soil water resources between newly planted Douglas-fir seedlings and aggressive early-seral plants, such as Senecio sylvaticus [L.] (Senecio), can create drought conditions that impact tree seedling physiology, growth, and likelihood of mortality. However, the specific impact of Senecio on soil moisture dynamics and inducement of water stress in newly planted tree seedlings across varying site conditions has not been quantified. This study quantified these interactions at three contrasting sites across the U.S. Pacific Northwest: the Coastal Range, the Cascade foothills, and the fringe of south-central valley of Western Oregon. We tested whether competition between Senecio and Douglas-fir seedlings for soil water resources in areas of high Senecio abundance caused increased water stress in the tree seedlings. Senecio demonstrated a high degree of plasticity across sites increasing its lifespan and shoot:root in response to increased soil water resources. Senecio also had more than twice the root area of influence as Douglas-fir. Overall, greater Senecio abundance was associated with greater soil moisture depletion and this soil moisture depletion was correlated with increased Douglas-fir water stress. The magnitude of this response varied across sites; the dry site had the greatest shifts in Senecio biomass partitioning, the highest observable water depletion, and the greatest amount of Douglas-fir water stress. The presented results can be useful for determining effective forest vegetation management regimes by considering the impact of Senecio presence on Douglas-fir seedling drought stress across different site conditions.

KW - Competition

KW - Invasive species

KW - Reforestation

KW - Vegetation management

KW - Water stress

U2 - 10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4

DO - 10.1007/s11056-021-09897-4

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85119299564

VL - 53

SP - 947

EP - 965

JO - New Forests

JF - New Forests

SN - 0169-4286

ER -

ID: 285877544