2000
DOI: 10.1890/1051-0761(2000)010[0174:dspord]2.0.co;2
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Directing Spatial Patterns of Recruitment During an Experimental Urban Woodland Reclamation

Abstract: Studies of biological invasions indicate that natural recruitment of new species can occur as a “nucleation” phenomenon, in which scattered colonization foci spread and coalesce. Ecological reclamation of damaged lands might make use of this potential for enhanced natural dispersal, by inoculating sites with multiple small plantings to attract animal dispersers and other mutualists from nearby remnants of natural habitat. We conducted an experimental test of this proposition. On a 6‐ha section of an abandoned … Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(113 citation statements)
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“…Other authors recommended plantings in ''clumps'' or ''tree islands'' to promote spatial heterogeneity, alter soil and microclimate, trap wind-dispersed seeds and serve as perches and cover for disperser animals (Harrington 1999;Robinson and Handel 2000;Zahawi and Augspurger 2006). Rey Benayas et al (2008) proposed the densely-planted ''woodland islets'' (tens to hundreds of m 2 ), wellspaced (tens to hundreds of m 2 apart) occupying 1 % of a field, to increase heterogeneity and biodiversity using an intermediate degree-between passive restoration and plantations-of intervention and consequently costs.…”
Section: Nucleation: a New Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other authors recommended plantings in ''clumps'' or ''tree islands'' to promote spatial heterogeneity, alter soil and microclimate, trap wind-dispersed seeds and serve as perches and cover for disperser animals (Harrington 1999;Robinson and Handel 2000;Zahawi and Augspurger 2006). Rey Benayas et al (2008) proposed the densely-planted ''woodland islets'' (tens to hundreds of m 2 ), wellspaced (tens to hundreds of m 2 apart) occupying 1 % of a field, to increase heterogeneity and biodiversity using an intermediate degree-between passive restoration and plantations-of intervention and consequently costs.…”
Section: Nucleation: a New Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach builds on observations that pioneer shrubs and trees naturally establish patchily in abandoned agricultural fields and facilitate the recruitment of other woody species via enhanced seed dispersal and improved establishment conditions (Yarranton and Morrison, 1974). The few experimental studies to date suggest that this strategy serves to enhance seed dispersal and seedling establishment in the first few years after planting (Robinson and Handel, 2000;Zahawi and Augspurger, 2006;Cole et al, 2010;Zahawi et al, 2013), but there have been no comparisons of woody biomass accumulation with other restoration strategies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recruitment limitation as a result of a lack of propagules dispersing into sites (often defined as dispersal limitation) affects regeneration of riparian vegetation (Battaglia et al 2008;Williams et al 2008), tropical forests (Pejcar et al 2008), abandoned mining sites (Kirmer et al 2008), Mediterranean forests (Aparicio et al 2008) and deciduous woodlands (Robinson and Handel 2000). For dispersal limitation, distance to a seed source is critical in determining the probability of species arriving at sites (Robinson and Handel 1993).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%