FlinnVellend2005
Référence
Flinn, K.M., Vellend, M. (2005) Recovery of forest plant communities in post-agricultural landscapes. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 3(5):243-250. (Scopus )
Résumé
As landscapes throughout Europe and eastern North America recover from past agricultural use, forests continue to reflect their agricultural history. For centuries after agriculture has ceased, plant communities on abandoned agricultural lands remain impoverished in herbaceous species characteristic of uncleared forests. To facilitate the recovery of biological diversity in these forests, and to anticipate the effects of future land-use decisions, we need to understand the process of recolonization. The unique interactions between forest herbs and agricultural history also allow us to explore some universal questions in ecology, such as how dispersal and environment limit species distributions. © The Ecological Society of America.
Format EndNote
Vous pouvez importer cette référence dans EndNote.
Format BibTeX-CSV
Vous pouvez importer cette référence en format BibTeX-CSV.
Format BibTeX
Vous pouvez copier l'entrée BibTeX de cette référence ci-bas, ou l'importer directement dans un logiciel tel que JabRef .
@ARTICLE { FlinnVellend2005,
AUTHOR = { Flinn, K.M. and Vellend, M. },
TITLE = { Recovery of forest plant communities in post-agricultural landscapes },
JOURNAL = { Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment },
YEAR = { 2005 },
VOLUME = { 3 },
PAGES = { 243-250 },
NUMBER = { 5 },
ABSTRACT = { As landscapes throughout Europe and eastern North America recover from past agricultural use, forests continue to reflect their agricultural history. For centuries after agriculture has ceased, plant communities on abandoned agricultural lands remain impoverished in herbaceous species characteristic of uncleared forests. To facilitate the recovery of biological diversity in these forests, and to anticipate the effects of future land-use decisions, we need to understand the process of recolonization. The unique interactions between forest herbs and agricultural history also allow us to explore some universal questions in ecology, such as how dispersal and environment limit species distributions. © The Ecological Society of America. },
COMMENT = { Cited By (since 1996): 95 Export Date: 11 March 2011 Source: Scopus },
ISSN = { 15409295 (ISSN) },
KEYWORDS = { agricultural land, land use change, plant community, Eastern Hemisphere, Eurasia, Europe, North America, Western Hemisphere, World },
OWNER = { Luc },
TIMESTAMP = { 2011.03.11 },
URL = { http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-20044393368&partnerID=40&md5=d509377fb935b7f30c8ba0ccbb0ac943 },
}