Volume 74 – Issue 2 (June 2009)

Species Assemblages of Tree Canopy Myxomycetes Related to Bark pH

ABSTRACT Acid deposition contributes to forest health concerns at high elevation sites in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP). Bark samples were taken from living trees at three study sites: Abies fraseri and Picea rubens from high elevation sites near the Clingman’s Dome area of Tennessee; Juniperus virginiana and Quercus alba at low elevation sites at GSMNP in the Cades Cove area and also at Pertle Springs (PS), Missouri. All trees were climbed using the doubled rope climbing method and sampled for bark at approximately 3 m increments up to 12 m. A total of 162 laboratory moist chamber cultures were prepared in Petri dishes using bark samples representing all tree species, then measured for pH, and examined for myxomycete plasmodia and fruiting bodies. Thirty-four myxomycete species were observed and identified from cultures of tree bark from GSMNP that included two new records, Physarum auriscalpium and a possible new species

Read / Download Full Article »

Bottomland Forests in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley Associated with the Endangered Lindera melissifolia

ABSTRACT Forest canopy and subcanopy data were collected from and compared among five disjunct bottomland hardwood forests in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, each with known occurrence of a population of the federally endangered shrub Lindera melissifolia. All study sites are cut-over forests, underlain by hydric soils, and have a seasonal high water table. Canopy and subcanopy species are similar among sites, but species differ in relative importance, and flood tolerant tree species exceed that of flood intolerant species. Distribution of L. melissifolia colonies within each study site was not associated with mean tree density or d.b.h. Forest composition and structure at each study site reflect hydrologic regime, topography, historical disturbance, and an absence of recent disturbance. Results of this study provide a quantitative description of bottomland forests that currently sustain L. melissifolia populations. This information may be utilized for development of forest management plans aimed at ensuring continued sustainability

Read / Download Full Article »

Influence of Reproductive and Environmental Factors on Population Size of Wild Hyacinth [Camassia angusta (Engelm. and A. Gray) Blank. (Liliaceae)], an Illinois Endangered Species

ABSTRACT Wild hyacinth (Camassia angusta) is a perennial species native to mesic prairies of the midwestern and south-central United States. In Illinois, the only extant population of this state-endangered species is in a small section of degraded black-soil prairie along a railroad track right-of-way south of Elwin, Macon County. The objectives of this study were to determine the population status, seed production, and effects of scarification and stratification on germination of C. angusta. The population was surveyed from 1990 to 2007. A survey of other plant species present was conducted in 1999. The site consisted of approximately 75% native and 25% exotic species. The number of flowering stems of Camassia angusta fluctuated significantly (28 to 169 plants) during the course of this study. Prescribed spring burns and a construction equipment disturbance may be partially responsible for these fluctuations. A large percentage of undeveloped fruit, resulting in low seed production (,3,000),

Read / Download Full Article »

Life in the Slow Lane: Palmetto Seedlings Exhibit Remarkable Survival but Slow Growth in Florida’s Nutrient-Poor Uplands

ABSTRACT The palmettos Serenoa repens and Sabal etonia are foundation species in many peninsular Florida vegetative associations. We monitored survival and growth of palmetto seedlings using two cohorts found in different vegetative associations. Mixed-species cohorts containing both Serenoa repens and Sabal etonia were individually tagged in 1989 and have been monitored until 2008. One cohort (N 5 100 seedlings) is in an ‘‘inopina-phase’’ scrubby flatwoods and a second cohort (N 5 78 seedlings) is in a ‘‘wiregrass-phase’’ flatwoods. The sand substrates at both sites are nutrient-poor Entisols that show rapid permeability, low availablewater capacity, and acidic pH. In addition to experiencing seasonal and variable annual precipitation patterns, these cohorts endured a severe and prolonged drought during 1999– 2001 as well as an intense fire at the height of this drought. Seedlings showed remarkable survivorship, with 57% of the flatwoods cohort and 35% of the scrubby flatwoods cohort surviving from 1989

Read / Download Full Article »

Spatiotemporal Analysis of Three Common Wetland Invasive Plant Species Using Herbarium Specimens and Geographic Information Systems

ABSTRACT The negative ecological impact of invasive plant species has been widely reported in recent years. Herbarium specimens can allow for the study of spatiotemporal spread of invasive species in order to understand distribution characteristics and patterns which can then be utilized for management decisions. In this study, three common wetland invasive plant species (Phragmites australis, Lythrum salicaria and Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum) were chosen and analyzed via two previously published methods to determine the historic rate and pattern of spread as well as to identify periods of invasiveness. Performance of these methods varied in scale with a general, area-corrected approach covering the entire southeastern United States and an associate species-corrected method covering smaller, regional areas of dense historical specimen collection. Results showed positive spread over time for these three species in both methods; however, periods of invasiveness did not coincide between the two methods. The use of two different methods and

Read / Download Full Article »

Spatially Narrow Wet Prairies

ABSTRACT Wet prairies in the Southeast consist of floristically diverse grass-sedge ecosystems that are conspicuously lacking in woody species because of seasonal soil saturation and frequent fire. They occupy a landscape position between mesic, pyrogenic pine savannas and hydric swamps and marshes. Wet prairies are recognized wherever they occur on broad expanses of land; however, many go unrecognized or are mistaken for ecotones where they occupy strips of land that narrowly separate pine savannas from more deeply inundated wetlands. Such spatially narrow wet prairie in west-central Florida was characterized in terms of its plant species composition and abundance, soils, and elevations relative to the sawpalmetto line (border with pine savanna), the cypress strand line (border with deeper wetlands), lichen line (maximum inundation following major storm events), and taper points on cypress buttresses (wet season normal pool). Wet prairie ranged horizontally from 1.5 to 30 m wide (mean 12.7 6 3.9

Read / Download Full Article »

Heat Shock Germination Responses of Three Eastern North American Temperate Species

ABSTRACT The requirement for heat shock to break physical dormancy of hard seeds is a widely known strategy for recruitment in fire maintained ecosystems. Despite extensive work by fire ecologists in the southeastern United States, heat shock response has been demonstrated for only a few eastern North American temperate species. In this study germination responses to dry and wet heat were investigated for three species with physical dormancy: Galactia regularis (Fabaceae), Lupinus perennis (Fabaceae), and Rhus copallinum (Anacardiaceae). Control, wet heat (1 min boiling), and dry heat (10 min at 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, and 110uC) treatments were independently applied in the laboratory. Maximum germination occurred at 80uC for G. regularis and L. perennis and was significantly greater than both control and boiling treatments. For R. copallinum, maximum germination occurred at 90uC for all populations investigated and was significantly greater than the control group in three of four populations.

Read / Download Full Article »

Vascular Flora of Sandhill Research and Education Center, Richland County, South Carolina

ABSTRACT Sandhill Research and Education Center is located on 215 ha of greenspace in South Carolina. The Center is now surrounded by suburban development. Although located within the Sandhills region and within the historic range of the Longleaf Pine Forest, agriculture has been the predominant land use during the last century. With development pressure and an interest in transitioning from agriculture to ecological restoration, a baseline inventory of the flora was initiated to provide further guidance to administrators. This survey delineates six plant community types (Swamp Tupelo, Sand Hickory, Blackjack Oak, Turkey Oak, Field, and Utility Right-of-Way) and reports a total of 328 species in 237 genera and 100 families. It adds two state records (Lespedeza virgata and Lotus corniculatus), 38 county records, and several noteworthy species.

Read / Download Full Article »

Noteworthy Collections: Virginia 74(2)

Trillium nivale Riddell (TRILLIACEAE)— Rockingham County: Approximately 4.0 km N of Keezletown, off of Mountain Valley Road, at the end of Walnut Hill Drive on forested hillside; elevation ca. 526 m; 30 March 2008. Conley K. McMullen 891 (photo) (JMUH). Significance. This is the first collection of T. nivale (snow trillium) from Rockingham County, and the second report for Virginia. An earlier collection was made near Forks of Waters in Highland County by Charles E. Stevens on 17 April 1983 [Charles E. Stevens 18455 (VPI)]. The specific location listed by Stevens is ‘‘wooded, limestone bluff of South Branch Potomac River ca. 0.15 mi S of where West Virginia line crosses river.’’ Stevens lists the elevation as 2330 ft. Trillium nivale is also found in Pendleton County, West Virginia, which borders both Rockingham and Highland Counties. Although considered rare in West Virginia, it is also listed for the counties of Cabell,

Read / Download Full Article »

Noteworthy Collections: South Carolina 74(2)

Gratiola graniticola D. Estes & R. L. Small (PLANTAGINACEAE)—York County: 35.104965uN, 81.205331uW, 1.8 km east of Highway 321, 10 m south of Highway 55 opposite [southern terminus of] Green Pond Road, Clover, 17 May 1992, Brunton and McIntosh 11,113 (MICH, APSC, Brunton personal herbarium); 16 May 2008, Brunton and McIntosh 17,130 (USCH, APSC, Brunton personal herbarium, UNC, CAN, DUKE, WIN). Significance. This represents the first record of Granite Hedge-hyssop beyond northcentral Georgia. It occurs at Clover, South Carolina in silty sand at the edge of shallow erosion pools on bare ground or associated with Isoetes piedmontana (Pfeiffer) Reed, Croton willdenowii Webster, Eleocharis tenuis (Willd.) Schultes, Nuttallanthus canadensis (L.) D. Sutton, and Juncus dichotomus Elliott, on a tiny (,1 ha), open, granite flatrock (bedrock outcrop). A number of physically similar flatrocks with shallow erosion pools are evident on aerial imagery of the Clover, South Carolina to Charlotte, North Carolina area. Examination

Read / Download Full Article »