Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.

Coastal vegetation comprises a number of coastal specialists and terrestrial generalists. It remains unclear how they persist on disturbed and undisturbed coastal conditions. We tested the hypothesis that coastal specialists may be superior to terrestrial generalists on supratidal zones of coasts, b...

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Main Authors: Hongxiao Yang, Jianmin Chu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3818275?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9dfefbc011904a6b96d078730155805b2020-11-24T21:45:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e7996410.1371/journal.pone.0079964Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.Hongxiao YangJianmin ChuCoastal vegetation comprises a number of coastal specialists and terrestrial generalists. It remains unclear how they persist on disturbed and undisturbed coastal conditions. We tested the hypothesis that coastal specialists may be superior to terrestrial generalists on supratidal zones of coasts, but their superiority can be influenced by human disturbances. Eight separate sandy coasts of the Shandong Peninsula were sampled, representing for disturbed and undisturbed sandy coasts. Plants growing on their supratidal zones were surveyed. On this basis, we compared the relative dominances, niche widths, and commonness of all species, and also analyzed species diversities of the coasts. Coastal specialists were found to be more common and widespread on supratidal zones of the sandy coasts than terrestrial generalists haphazardly invading from hinterlands. Coastal specialists exhibited lower Sørensen dissimilarities than terrestrial generalists among the coasts. Tourist trampling seemed more detrimental than pond fishery to coastal vegetation. Relative to terrestrial generalists, coastal specialists responded to human disturbances more deterministically, with steady decreases in species diversities. These evidences verify that coastal specialists are intrinsically superior to terrestrial generalists on supratidal zones of coasts, especially of undisturbed coasts, because their dispersal among coasts adapts well to local storm surge regime. They also validate that human disturbances can depress the superiority of coastal specialists, partly by inducing invasion of terrestrial generalists.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3818275?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hongxiao Yang
Jianmin Chu
spellingShingle Hongxiao Yang
Jianmin Chu
Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Hongxiao Yang
Jianmin Chu
author_sort Hongxiao Yang
title Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
title_short Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
title_full Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
title_fullStr Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
title_full_unstemmed Persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern China.
title_sort persistence of coastal vegetation in supratidal zones of northern china.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Coastal vegetation comprises a number of coastal specialists and terrestrial generalists. It remains unclear how they persist on disturbed and undisturbed coastal conditions. We tested the hypothesis that coastal specialists may be superior to terrestrial generalists on supratidal zones of coasts, but their superiority can be influenced by human disturbances. Eight separate sandy coasts of the Shandong Peninsula were sampled, representing for disturbed and undisturbed sandy coasts. Plants growing on their supratidal zones were surveyed. On this basis, we compared the relative dominances, niche widths, and commonness of all species, and also analyzed species diversities of the coasts. Coastal specialists were found to be more common and widespread on supratidal zones of the sandy coasts than terrestrial generalists haphazardly invading from hinterlands. Coastal specialists exhibited lower Sørensen dissimilarities than terrestrial generalists among the coasts. Tourist trampling seemed more detrimental than pond fishery to coastal vegetation. Relative to terrestrial generalists, coastal specialists responded to human disturbances more deterministically, with steady decreases in species diversities. These evidences verify that coastal specialists are intrinsically superior to terrestrial generalists on supratidal zones of coasts, especially of undisturbed coasts, because their dispersal among coasts adapts well to local storm surge regime. They also validate that human disturbances can depress the superiority of coastal specialists, partly by inducing invasion of terrestrial generalists.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3818275?pdf=render
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