info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Patterns of Tree Establishment Following Glacier-Induced Floods in Southern Patagonia
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Guerrido, Claudia Marcela; Villalba, Ricardo; Amoroso, Mariano Martin; Rodriguez Catón, Milagros Rocío; Patterns of Tree Establishment Following Glacier-Induced Floods in Southern Patagonia; Springer; 2020; 225-246
978-3-030-36929-3
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Guerrido, Claudia Marcela
Villalba, Ricardo
Amoroso, Mariano Martin
Rodriguez Catón, Milagros Rocío
Resumen
Whereas tree establishment after large-scale disturbances such as fires, avalanches, and landslides have been documented for Patagonian forests, information on forest recovery following floods is scarce. Glaciar Perito Moreno has remained stable throughout the twentieth century, reaching the Peninsula de Magallanes several times and embalming parts of Lago Argentino. Following each ice-dam flood, the Nothofagus forests along the flooded shores die. We combined dendrochronology and spatial statistics to describe forest recolonization following the episodic flood caused by this glacier in 1988. Four tree species recolonized the lakeshores after the flood. Tree establishment started during spring-summer 1988– 1989, the growing season following the break of the ice dam in February 1988. More than 60% of the trees were established between the years 1994–2000, suggesting a rapid colonization of bare shores after the ice-dam break. Using Ripley’s spatial analysis, a 100% significant association between species was recorded at sites where two or more species were present. Species dominance was largely modulated by the composition of neighboring non-flooded forests and the climatic conditions along the precipitation gradient. While rates of tree colonization are influenced by species and their seed dispersal capacities, the grouping patterns by site may be modulated by differences in substrate and microclimatic conditions.