Disturbance and demography of Phylica arborea (Rhamnaceae) on the Tristan-Gough group of islands

Abstract
Populations of Phylica arborea Thouars, an evergreen tree endemic to six southern oceanic islands, have been depleted by wood gathering and browsing on Amsterdam Island and Tristan da Cunha, and it was feared that introduced rodents were destroying seed and reducing regeneration on uninhabited Gough Island. A comparison of the demography of this species on four islands in the Tristan-Gough group suggests that rodents have little effect on seedling numberS. Regeneration seldom occurs in undisturbed P. Arborea groves: germination and seedling survival appears to be dependent on periodical removal of established trees and understorey vegetation by soil-slips and occasional fireS. Climatic and vegetation differences problably account for the less frequent regeneration at Gough Island relative to that at the Tristan islands.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: