Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study

With a growing number of species at risk of extinction, reintroductions have become an important component of several recovery schemes. In 2005, a recovery program including reintroduction and reinforcement efforts as well as monitoring activities was implemented in Québec for the endangered false h...

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Main Authors: Annabelle Langlois, Stéphanie Pellerin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-07-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989416300683
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spelling doaj-fe308dd2ae4f4d118b5d32d65e81dfe92020-11-24T22:57:47ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942016-07-017C21422410.1016/j.gecco.2016.07.003Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year studyAnnabelle LangloisStéphanie PellerinWith a growing number of species at risk of extinction, reintroductions have become an important component of several recovery schemes. In 2005, a recovery program including reintroduction and reinforcement efforts as well as monitoring activities was implemented in Québec for the endangered false hop sedge (Carex lupuliformis). Between 2005 and 2010, a total of 600 plants were reintroduced in different habitats (dry and wet) on five distinct sites (swamps). Our objective was to determine which environmental variables (soil moisture, light availability, competition, aphid infestation) influenced the survival and vigour (height, number of shoots, number of fruiting shoots) of the transplanted individuals. We also compared the survival, growth and fecundity of transplanted and wild individuals. Discriminant analyses and ANOVAs indicated that exotic aphid infestation, excessive soil moisture and low light availability were the main causes of premature transplant death. Soil moisture (when not excessive, as shown by the survival analyses), light availability and competition volume positively influenced transplant vigour. Although only 4% of original transplants remain alive after a decade, at least one new population has established and total population has increased six-fold, when wild individuals and transplants still alive in 2015 are included in the calculations. Furthermore, at least 33% of transplants produced seeds at least once. Overall, transplants were less vigorous than wild individuals, but were found to live on average just as long, suggesting that the biological success of our reintroduction program is promising. Further studies of false hop sedge should include an examination of seed viability, to evaluate whether the small, newly-created populations experienced reduced germination.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989416300683AphidsCarex lupuliformisCompetitionEndangered speciesLight availabilityReintroductionReinforcementSoil moistureSwamps
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annabelle Langlois
Stéphanie Pellerin
spellingShingle Annabelle Langlois
Stéphanie Pellerin
Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
Global Ecology and Conservation
Aphids
Carex lupuliformis
Competition
Endangered species
Light availability
Reintroduction
Reinforcement
Soil moisture
Swamps
author_facet Annabelle Langlois
Stéphanie Pellerin
author_sort Annabelle Langlois
title Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
title_short Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
title_full Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
title_fullStr Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
title_full_unstemmed Recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: A ten-year study
title_sort recovery of the endangered false hop sedge: a ten-year study
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2016-07-01
description With a growing number of species at risk of extinction, reintroductions have become an important component of several recovery schemes. In 2005, a recovery program including reintroduction and reinforcement efforts as well as monitoring activities was implemented in Québec for the endangered false hop sedge (Carex lupuliformis). Between 2005 and 2010, a total of 600 plants were reintroduced in different habitats (dry and wet) on five distinct sites (swamps). Our objective was to determine which environmental variables (soil moisture, light availability, competition, aphid infestation) influenced the survival and vigour (height, number of shoots, number of fruiting shoots) of the transplanted individuals. We also compared the survival, growth and fecundity of transplanted and wild individuals. Discriminant analyses and ANOVAs indicated that exotic aphid infestation, excessive soil moisture and low light availability were the main causes of premature transplant death. Soil moisture (when not excessive, as shown by the survival analyses), light availability and competition volume positively influenced transplant vigour. Although only 4% of original transplants remain alive after a decade, at least one new population has established and total population has increased six-fold, when wild individuals and transplants still alive in 2015 are included in the calculations. Furthermore, at least 33% of transplants produced seeds at least once. Overall, transplants were less vigorous than wild individuals, but were found to live on average just as long, suggesting that the biological success of our reintroduction program is promising. Further studies of false hop sedge should include an examination of seed viability, to evaluate whether the small, newly-created populations experienced reduced germination.
topic Aphids
Carex lupuliformis
Competition
Endangered species
Light availability
Reintroduction
Reinforcement
Soil moisture
Swamps
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989416300683
work_keys_str_mv AT annabellelanglois recoveryoftheendangeredfalsehopsedgeatenyearstudy
AT stephaniepellerin recoveryoftheendangeredfalsehopsedgeatenyearstudy
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