Logo image
The University Of West Florida Campus Ecosystem study: Variation in Species Composition, Soil Fertility, and Soil Microbiome in Hardwood Stand Versus Pine Stand
Poster   Open access

The University Of West Florida Campus Ecosystem study: Variation in Species Composition, Soil Fertility, and Soil Microbiome in Hardwood Stand Versus Pine Stand

Elizabeth Hargis, Sarah K. Rabinowitz, Brenton C. Davis and Leo L. Sweet
University of West Florida Libraries
Student Scholar Symposium & Faculty Research Showcase (University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida, 04/20/2023)
04/20/2023

Metrics

5 File views/ downloads
85 Record Views

Abstract

The longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) ecosystem is among the more diverse in North America, being home to a unique assemblage of species. Over the last century, these forests have been at risk of disappearing due to logging, urbanization, and fire exclusion (Gilliam et al. 2020). Longleaf pine (hereafter, pine)-dominated stands contrast sharply with hardwood stands, both by tree species affecting soil and soil fertility affecting tree species. This ecological feedback has been referred to as circulus vitiosus (Jenny et al. 1969). The UWF Campus Ecosystem Study (CES) has to date studied pine-dominated stands of the main campus and natural areas (Gilliam et al. 2020, 2021, 2022). Our research extends this to include a hardwood stand (Fig. 1). Our study examined differences between these two forest types, addressing the following questions: (1) how does species composition vary with forest type? (2) how does soil fertility vary with stand type? (3) how does soil microbiome vary with stand type (to be answered later)?
pdf
Variation in Species Composition, Soil Fertility, and Soil Microbiome in Hardwood Stand Versus Pine Stand9.72 MBDownloadView
PresentationPoster pdf Open Access

Related links

Details

Logo image