NZ J Ecol 2018
DOI: 10.20417/nzjecol.42.26
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Biome transition in a changing world: from indigenous grasslands to shrub-dominated communities

Abstract: Shrub encroachment in grassland environments is observed in many regions worldwide. However, in New Zealand, there is no consensus on the trend and magnitude of this phenomenon, and we lack empirical data to determine what environmental variables may promote shrub invasion. Here, we present a comprehensive study evaluating shrub cover change in a tussock water catchment in eastern Otago, New Zealand. Specifically, we aim to quantify shrub cover change in the catchment between 1980 and 2015, to identify the shr… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(88 reference statements)
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“…In particular, relatively species‐poor Mānuka ( Leptospermum scoparium , Myrtaceae) shrubland showed a fast‐flammability profile (high combustibility) for both understorey and canopy layers. Mānuka was not present in our grassland transects but is spreading rapidly elsewhere in Mahu Whenua (Ward 2018) and in other destocked tussock grassland in southern New Zealand (Ropars et al 2018). Disturbance tolerant woody species like Mānuka are more prevalent in historically burnt and grazed landscapes than palatable or fire‐intolerant species, so it is unsurprisingly that it features heavily during the process of passive forestation following destocking.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In particular, relatively species‐poor Mānuka ( Leptospermum scoparium , Myrtaceae) shrubland showed a fast‐flammability profile (high combustibility) for both understorey and canopy layers. Mānuka was not present in our grassland transects but is spreading rapidly elsewhere in Mahu Whenua (Ward 2018) and in other destocked tussock grassland in southern New Zealand (Ropars et al 2018). Disturbance tolerant woody species like Mānuka are more prevalent in historically burnt and grazed landscapes than palatable or fire‐intolerant species, so it is unsurprisingly that it features heavily during the process of passive forestation following destocking.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Native woody communities are now regenerating in many grassland areas protected from fire and grazing (e.g. Young et al 2016; Ropars et al 2018; Ward 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Woody thickening, an increase in native or exotic woody plant density, is increasing in some areas of tussock grasslands due to plant invasions, changing fire regimes, and land management decisions, including retirement from grazing, and active tree planting (Young et al 2016;Ropars et al 2018). Pressures from deliberate exotic afforestation potentially leads to additional sources of wilding/invasive trees, losses of local biodiversity, changes to soil microbial communities, and altered fuel loading and fuel structure.…”
Section: Current Understandingmentioning
confidence: 99%