Succession of Disturbed and Undisturbed Chalk Grassland at Aston Rowant National Nature Reserve: Dynamics of Species Changes
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Applied Ecology
- Vol. 27 (3) , 897-912
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2404385
Abstract
(1) The first 14 years of secondary succession, from 1969 to 1982, are described in a randomized block design experiment on chalk grassland at Aston Rowant NNR. There were four blocks with four treatments: annual grazing, no treatment, and ungrazed after disturbance by burning or rotavating in 1969. (2) Total numbers of species in 10 .times. 12 m plots and 1-m2 quadrats were variable, with few clear trends. Differences in species packing accounted for the highest numbers being recorded in the quadrats but not in the plots of the grazed treatment. (3) Depletion curves over 14 years for the untreated and rotavated. Burnt plots were intermediate. (4) Annual turnover of species in the quadrats was greater in grazed grassland than in the succession treatments as a result of the mortality and recolonization from the grazing level which maintained this plagioclimax grassland. Constant and transient species in the quadrats of each treatment are given. (5) Numbers of species annually colonizing and lost from the quadrats to fluctuate in a similar way on the different treatments. This was probably due to climatic changes, as the 1976 drought apparently affected the quadrat results on almost all the plots.Keywords
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