Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)

<p><em>Aim of study:</em> Acacia dealbata is a naturalized tree of invasive behaviour that has expanded from small plots associated with vineyards into forest ecosystems. Our main objective is to find evidence to support the notion that disturbances, particularly forest fires, are...

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Main Author: Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria 2014-04-01
Series:Forest Systems
Online Access:http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/fs/article/view/2531
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spelling doaj-83fae6e20e2d446ba9b35eb54a65ec2f2020-11-24T22:58:21ZengInstituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y AlimentariaForest Systems2171-98452014-04-0123131410.5424/fs/2014231-025311951Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva0Departamento de Ecología y Genética Centro de Investigación Forestal CIFOR-INIA<p><em>Aim of study:</em> Acacia dealbata is a naturalized tree of invasive behaviour that has expanded from small plots associated with vineyards into forest ecosystems. Our main objective is to find evidence to support the notion that disturbances, particularly forest fires, are important driving factors in the current expansion of A. dealbata.<br /><em>Area of study:</em> We mapped it current distribution using three study areas and assesses the temporal changes registered in forest cover in these areas of the valley of the river Miño. <br /><em>Material and Methods:</em> The analyses were based on visual interpretation of aerial photographs taken in 1985 and 2003 of three 1x1 km study areas and field works.<br /><em>Main result:</em> A 62.4%, 48.6% and 22.2% of the surface area was covered by A. dealbata in 2003 in pure or mixed stands. Furthermore, areas composed exclusively of A. dealbata make up 33.8%, 15.2% and 5.7% of the stands. The transition matrix analyses between the two dates support our hypothesis that the areas currently covered by A. dealbata make up a greater proportion of the forest area previously classified as unwooded or open forest than those without A. dealbata cover. Both of these surface types are the result of an important impact of fire in the region. Within each area, A. dealbata is mainly located on steeper terrain, which is more affected by fires. <br /><em>Research highlights:</em> A. dealbata is becoming the dominant tree species over large areas and the invasion of this species gives rise to monospecific stands, which may have important implications for future fire regimes.</p><p><br /><strong>Keywords:</strong> Fire regime; Mimosa; plant invasion; silver wattle.</p>http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/fs/article/view/2531
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva
spellingShingle Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva
Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
Forest Systems
author_facet Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva
author_sort Antonio Vazquez de la Cueva
title Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
title_short Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
title_full Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
title_fullStr Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
title_full_unstemmed Case studies of the expansion of Acacia dealbata in the valley of the river Miño (Galicia, Spain)
title_sort case studies of the expansion of acacia dealbata in the valley of the river miño (galicia, spain)
publisher Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria
series Forest Systems
issn 2171-9845
publishDate 2014-04-01
description <p><em>Aim of study:</em> Acacia dealbata is a naturalized tree of invasive behaviour that has expanded from small plots associated with vineyards into forest ecosystems. Our main objective is to find evidence to support the notion that disturbances, particularly forest fires, are important driving factors in the current expansion of A. dealbata.<br /><em>Area of study:</em> We mapped it current distribution using three study areas and assesses the temporal changes registered in forest cover in these areas of the valley of the river Miño. <br /><em>Material and Methods:</em> The analyses were based on visual interpretation of aerial photographs taken in 1985 and 2003 of three 1x1 km study areas and field works.<br /><em>Main result:</em> A 62.4%, 48.6% and 22.2% of the surface area was covered by A. dealbata in 2003 in pure or mixed stands. Furthermore, areas composed exclusively of A. dealbata make up 33.8%, 15.2% and 5.7% of the stands. The transition matrix analyses between the two dates support our hypothesis that the areas currently covered by A. dealbata make up a greater proportion of the forest area previously classified as unwooded or open forest than those without A. dealbata cover. Both of these surface types are the result of an important impact of fire in the region. Within each area, A. dealbata is mainly located on steeper terrain, which is more affected by fires. <br /><em>Research highlights:</em> A. dealbata is becoming the dominant tree species over large areas and the invasion of this species gives rise to monospecific stands, which may have important implications for future fire regimes.</p><p><br /><strong>Keywords:</strong> Fire regime; Mimosa; plant invasion; silver wattle.</p>
url http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/fs/article/view/2531
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