Title: Nonalluvial wetlands of the southern Appalachians
1Non-alluvial wetlands of the southern Appalachians
- Brenda Wichmann
- Thomas R. Wentworth
- Robert K. Peet
- Marjorie Boyer
2Montane Non-alluvial Wetlands
- Called bogs by locals
- WV south to GA
- Small (0.5 2.0 ha)
- Geographically Isolated
A.S. Weakley 2007
3Landscape Position
- Flat valley bottoms
- Poorly drained stream heads
- Flooding rare or non-existent
- Nutrient poor seepage
- High water table
112,000
112,000
112,000
4Biodiversity
- Northern Coastal Plain disjunct taxa
- Globally rare species (42 G1-G3 2 E 3FSC )
- Global rare communities
- Threatened ecosystem
Pogonia ophioglossiodes (L.) Ker-Gawl
Rynchospora alba (L.) Vahl
Menyanthes trifoliata L.
5Vegetation
shrub bogs
mosaic bogs
mafic fens
herbaceous bogs
6Current US National Vegetation Classification
types
- Very broad
- Based on cursorily inspection
- Montane Bogs, Fens and Seeps
- Forested Bogs (4)
- Mafic Calcareous Fens Seeps (4)
- Sphagnum Shrub Bogs Seeps (11)
-
7Problem
Objective
- Document range of compositional variation
- Determine relationship to physical environment
- Understudied
- Compositional variation relationship to
environment is largely unknown
8 Study Area
Virginia
64 plots from 40 Sites across 11 counties
Tennessee
South Carolina
Georgia
9Methods CVS Protocol
- Permanent plots
- Multiple spatial scales
- Cover of each species
- Physiognomic structure
- Soil sample
- Other abiotic characters
10Results Floristics
- 408 taxa in 88 families
- 13 Globally Rare (G1-G3)
- 29 NC Imperiled (S1, S2)
- 5 FSC
- 1 Endangered
- 8 County Records
11Results Sphagnum
Sphagnum diversity is an important component of
these communities 8 RARE Sphagnum spp. (53
rare NC)
12Results Community Analysis
- Cluster Analysis
- Nonmetric Multidimentional Scaling (NMS)
Organize plots according to similarity (or
difference) in species composition
13RESULTS Community Types
Ordination diagram
- Colored Cluster groups of similar composition
- Arrows direction of max. increase
Expected Environmental gradients are important
14Conclusions
- Vary with elevation, geography, and soil
chemistry - Insular communities with chance differences
between sites making floristic classification at
least challenging and imprecise - Current NVC needs significant revision with at
least 3 new types and refinement or elimination
of 8 types - Lots more work needed
15Implications
- Quantitative documentation and analysis of
compositional variation - Revision of current NVC types
- Guide conservation decisions
- Baseline data
- Restoration
- Management
16Acknowledgements
- Carolina Vegetation Survey
- NC Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) - Caitlin Elam, Wade Wall, Forbes Boyle, Misty
Franklin, Chris Liloia, Kirk Ross, Jerry Reece,
Patrick McMillan, Dave Danley, Jeff Ott, Amanda
Senft, Sarah Marcinko, and Kevin Dixon - UNC Department of Biology
- NCSU Department of Botany