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July
17, 2007 A new study of
bottomland hardwood forests in
the southeastern Researchers
charting the growth of vines in
two forests in The patterns
observed in the south add to a
growing number of studies that found similar patterns in temperate and
tropical
forests, said Bruce Allen, the study's lead author and a recent
doctoral
graduate of Ohio State University's School of Environment and Natural
Resources. “Collectively,
we're talking about an
increase of more than 500 vine stems in 27 acres of forest area that we
studied,” he said. “And all of the growth is within
the last 10 to 20 years.
Old photographs from the sites indicate there may have been fewer vines
historically. “There
are now so many vines that they're
starting to change the makeup of the forest,” he continued.
“It appears that as
the number of vines increase, the density of small trees decreases at a
fairly
uniform rate.” Although the
specific reasons for this shift
aren't fully understood, Allen and his colleagues say possible
mechanisms
include increases in carbon dioxide concentrations, which have been
shown to
increase vine growth more than tree growth. “Many
vines thrive on elevated levels of
carbon dioxide,” he said. “Several studies suggest
that vines like poison ivy
benefit more than other plants from higher CO2 levels.” The findings
appear in a recent issue of the The researchers
collected 12 years' worth of
data from six plots that each covered 2.5 acres – that's
about the size of a
football field – in an old-growth forest in The researchers
also surveyed five 2.5-acre
plots in a second-growth forest – a forest that was partially
logged about 100
years ago and has grown back – along the The researchers
gathered data on vine growth
in this protected forest every six to 10 years, beginning in 1979. Allen said that he
wanted to see if there was
any difference in vine density between the old growth and newer forest. During each survey
session researchers would
count the number of vine stems in each plot, identify new and dead
stems, and
look at vine growth from previous surveys. Vine density in
the old-growth, Congaree
forest nearly doubled within 12 years. Right after Hurricane Hugo,
there were
about 100 vines in each plot. By 2002, that average had increased to
slightly
more than 200 vines per plot. While the second-growth, Savannah River
forest
had fewer vines by the end of the study, the researchers calculated a
10-fold
increase in the number of vines in this forest -- they counted an
average of 10
vines per plot by the end of the study in the The five-fold
difference in vine density
between the two forests suggests that second-growth forests may be at
more risk
to threatening vine growth. Researchers wonder whether the steadily
increasing
growth in these forests will continue in the coming years. Unpublished
data on
vine growth in these forests gathered during the last four years
suggests that
this growth will continue. If it does, that could have an economic
effect on
the people who manage floodplain forests for timber. “Although
there was a substantial difference in
the number of vines in each forest, the increase in density at the “But to
see such a clear, definitive increase
at the undisturbed site along the A few years ago,
Allen and his colleagues
published a study suggesting that increased vine growth equates to a
decrease
in tree growth. As the number of
vines increase, their leaves
fill a forest's canopy and essentially reduce the amount of sunlight
that
reaches the forest floor. Some of the competing plants die because they
can't
get enough light. “The
likely result is that more vines will
grow on existing trees, and compete directly with tree
seedlings,” Allen said.
“A steady increase in vine numbers will likely influence the
kind of trees that
ultimately grow in these forests.” Still, Allen says
it would take many
lifetimes to completely change the look of the forests. “Both
study sites lie in a floodplain and are
often in the path of hurricane-force winds, so their landscape can
change
rapidly,” Allen said. “Data we've gathered from the
Congaree forest shows a
reduction in vine density after a hurricane. The winds wipe out many of
the
trees on which vines grow, thereby letting more light into the forest
and also
triggering a short-term increase in tree growth beneath the
canopy.” This work received
support from several
agencies, including the National Park Service, the U.S. Department of
Energy,
the Ohio Agricultural Research and
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