Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard

Background Abandoned coal piles after the closure of mines have a potential negative influence on the environment, such as soil acidification and heavy metal contamination. Therefore, revegetation by efficient species is required. For this, we wanted to identify the role of Silene acaulis in the suc...

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Published in:Journal of Ecology and Environment
Main Authors: Oh, Minwoo, Lee, Eun Ju
Other Authors: 오민우, 이은주
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10371/173712
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftseoulnuniv:oai:s-space.snu.ac.kr:10371/173712 2023-05-15T14:54:26+02:00 Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard Oh, Minwoo Lee, Eun Ju 오민우 이은주 2021-01-04 https://hdl.handle.net/10371/173712 https://doi.org/10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4 en eng BMC Journal of Ecology and Environment. 2021 Jan 04;45(1):1 2288-1220 https://hdl.handle.net/10371/173712 doi:10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4 The Author(s) Pioneer species Facilitation Silene acaulis Coal pile Cushion plant High arctic Svalbard Article 2021 ftseoulnuniv https://doi.org/10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4 2023-02-10T02:22:28Z Background Abandoned coal piles after the closure of mines have a potential negative influence on the environment, such as soil acidification and heavy metal contamination. Therefore, revegetation by efficient species is required. For this, we wanted to identify the role of Silene acaulis in the succession of coal piles as a pioneer and a nurse plant. S. acaulis is a well-studied cushion plant living in the Arctic and alpine environments in the northern hemisphere. It has a highly compact cushion-like form and hosts more plant species under its canopy by ameliorating stressful microhabitats. In this research, we surveyed vegetation cover on open plots and co-occurring species within S. acaulis cushions in coal piles with different slope aspects and a control site where no coal was found. The plant cover and the similarity of communities among sites were compared. Also, the interaction effects of S. acaulis were assessed by rarefaction curves. Results S. acaulis was a dominant species with the highest cover (6.7%) on the coal piles and occurred with other well-known pioneer species. Plant communities on the coal piles were significantly different from the control site. We found that the pioneer species S. acaulis showed facilitation, neutral, and competition effect in the north-east facing slope, the south-east facing slope, and the flat ground, respectively. This result was consistent with the stress gradient hypothesis because the facilitation only occurred on the north-east facing slope, which was the most stressed condition, although all the interactions observed were not statistically significant. Conclusions S. acaulis was a dominant pioneer plant in the succession of coal piles. The interaction effect of S. acaulis on other species depended on the slope and its direction on the coal piles. Overall, it plays an important role in the succession of coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard. This research was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea Grant from the Korean Government ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Silene acaulis Svalbard Seoul National University: S-Space Arctic Svalbard Journal of Ecology and Environment 45 1
institution Open Polar
collection Seoul National University: S-Space
op_collection_id ftseoulnuniv
language English
topic Pioneer species
Facilitation
Silene acaulis
Coal pile
Cushion plant
High arctic
Svalbard
spellingShingle Pioneer species
Facilitation
Silene acaulis
Coal pile
Cushion plant
High arctic
Svalbard
Oh, Minwoo
Lee, Eun Ju
Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
topic_facet Pioneer species
Facilitation
Silene acaulis
Coal pile
Cushion plant
High arctic
Svalbard
description Background Abandoned coal piles after the closure of mines have a potential negative influence on the environment, such as soil acidification and heavy metal contamination. Therefore, revegetation by efficient species is required. For this, we wanted to identify the role of Silene acaulis in the succession of coal piles as a pioneer and a nurse plant. S. acaulis is a well-studied cushion plant living in the Arctic and alpine environments in the northern hemisphere. It has a highly compact cushion-like form and hosts more plant species under its canopy by ameliorating stressful microhabitats. In this research, we surveyed vegetation cover on open plots and co-occurring species within S. acaulis cushions in coal piles with different slope aspects and a control site where no coal was found. The plant cover and the similarity of communities among sites were compared. Also, the interaction effects of S. acaulis were assessed by rarefaction curves. Results S. acaulis was a dominant species with the highest cover (6.7%) on the coal piles and occurred with other well-known pioneer species. Plant communities on the coal piles were significantly different from the control site. We found that the pioneer species S. acaulis showed facilitation, neutral, and competition effect in the north-east facing slope, the south-east facing slope, and the flat ground, respectively. This result was consistent with the stress gradient hypothesis because the facilitation only occurred on the north-east facing slope, which was the most stressed condition, although all the interactions observed were not statistically significant. Conclusions S. acaulis was a dominant pioneer plant in the succession of coal piles. The interaction effect of S. acaulis on other species depended on the slope and its direction on the coal piles. Overall, it plays an important role in the succession of coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard. This research was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea Grant from the Korean Government ...
author2 오민우
이은주
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Oh, Minwoo
Lee, Eun Ju
author_facet Oh, Minwoo
Lee, Eun Ju
author_sort Oh, Minwoo
title Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
title_short Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
title_full Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
title_fullStr Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
title_full_unstemmed Cushion plant Silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the High Arctic, Svalbard
title_sort cushion plant silene acaulis is a pioneer species at abandoned coal piles in the high arctic, svalbard
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10371/173712
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4
geographic Arctic
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Svalbard
genre Arctic
Silene acaulis
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
Silene acaulis
Svalbard
op_relation Journal of Ecology and Environment. 2021 Jan 04;45(1):1
2288-1220
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/173712
doi:10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4
op_rights The Author(s)
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1186/s41610-020-00177-4
container_title Journal of Ecology and Environment
container_volume 45
container_issue 1
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