We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Gardening the Wild: Change in the Flora and Vegetation of a Suburban Coastal Reserve 1911-2013.
- Authors
IVEY‐LAW, MEGAN; KIRKPATRICK, JAMIE B.
- Abstract
Intensively used and managed remnants of native vegetation in cities can have characteristics that result as much from ecological gardening as processes independent of humans. We test the degree to which the changes in vegetation of the Bayside Reserve, Melbourne, are consistent with the outcome we would expect from an ecologically gardened nature and to what degree they reflect ongoing processes of exotic invasion and synthetic vegetation dynamics. We compared species lists from 1911, 1971 and 2013 and sample area data from 1971 and 2013. The flora became richer and more exotic, although some native plant species lost in 1971 had been reintroduced to the reserve in 2013. Between 1971 and 2013, the vegetation increased in cover, shrub and tree density, sample areas species richness, and nativeness, the latter two results being inconsistent with the usual patterns of increasing exoticness and decline in species richness with shrub and tree encroachment. These variations from normality were likely to have resulted from the impacts of planting of natives and weeding of exotics, activity that has created combinations of species that probably never occurred in pre-European vegetation. Although it might not be possible to return to pre-European ecosystems within this vegetation remnant, the gardened approximation helps some locally uncommon species survive and may make people more sympathetic to nature conservation as a whole.
- Subjects
GARDENING; VEGETATION &; climate; VEGETATION dynamics; NATIVE plants; FOREST density; SPECIES diversity
- Publication
Geographical Research, 2015, Vol 53, Issue 2, p121
- ISSN
1745-5863
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1745-5871.12105