Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species

Published Version Assisted re-vegetation is particularly difficult in subarctic and arctic ecosystems where the impact of anthropogenic activities can be extensive and natural plant regeneration is slow. The construction of a military base in the 1950s at Kuujjuarapik–Whapmagoostui in northern Quebe...

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Published in:Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
Main Authors: Deshaies, Alexis, Boudreau, Stéphane, Harper, Karen A., 1969-
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/29405
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spelling ftstmarysunivca:oai:library2:01/29405 2023-05-15T15:12:14+02:00 Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species Deshaies, Alexis Boudreau, Stéphane Harper, Karen A., 1969- 2009-11 application/pdf http://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/29405 en eng Taylor & Francis https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-41.4.434 1523-0430 http://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/29405 Revegetation -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec Restoration ecology -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec Lathyrus Grasses Fertilizers Text 2009 ftstmarysunivca https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-41.4.434 2022-05-13T05:44:42Z Published Version Assisted re-vegetation is particularly difficult in subarctic and arctic ecosystems where the impact of anthropogenic activities can be extensive and natural plant regeneration is slow. The construction of a military base in the 1950s at Kuujjuarapik–Whapmagoostui in northern Quebec destroyed most of the vegetation cover. Afterwards, other anthropogenic disturbances linked to the village expansion (housing, ATV traffic, pedestrian trampling) have slowed down the recovery process. To provide residents with low-cost but efficient assisted revegetation techniques, we evaluated the performance (seedling emergence, survival, and biomass production) of three indigenous plant species (Leymus mollis, Lathyrus japonicus, Trisetum spicatum) submitted to different levels of mineral and organic fertilizer additions in both a greenhouse experiment and a field plantation in the village. In the greenhouse experiment, moderate mineral fertilization had positive impacts on seedling emergence and both above ground and below ground biomass of L. mollis. The magnitude of this impact on biomass was greater when mineral fertilization was combined with organic fertilization. The effects of mineral fertilization were negative on the other two species, especially at higher fertilization levels. However, after two growing seasons, a moderate level of mineral fertilizer in the field plantation had positive effects on the cover and above ground biomass of all three species. Overall, organic fertilization from the substrate of a nearby marsh did not enhance plant performance in either experiment. Planting seeds of L. mollis or T. spicatum in combination with a moderate level of mineral fertilization at the time of planting provides a low-cost assisted re-vegetation treatment for subarctic villages. Text Arctic Kuujjuarapik Subarctic Saint Mary's University, Halifax: Institutional Repository Arctic Kuujjuarapik ENVELOPE(-77.762,-77.762,55.276,55.276) Whapmagoostui ENVELOPE(-77.750,-77.750,55.250,55.250) Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 41 4 434 441
institution Open Polar
collection Saint Mary's University, Halifax: Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftstmarysunivca
language English
topic Revegetation -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Restoration ecology -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Lathyrus
Grasses
Fertilizers
spellingShingle Revegetation -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Restoration ecology -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Lathyrus
Grasses
Fertilizers
Deshaies, Alexis
Boudreau, Stéphane
Harper, Karen A., 1969-
Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
topic_facet Revegetation -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Restoration ecology -- Québec (Province) -- Nord-du-Québec
Lathyrus
Grasses
Fertilizers
description Published Version Assisted re-vegetation is particularly difficult in subarctic and arctic ecosystems where the impact of anthropogenic activities can be extensive and natural plant regeneration is slow. The construction of a military base in the 1950s at Kuujjuarapik–Whapmagoostui in northern Quebec destroyed most of the vegetation cover. Afterwards, other anthropogenic disturbances linked to the village expansion (housing, ATV traffic, pedestrian trampling) have slowed down the recovery process. To provide residents with low-cost but efficient assisted revegetation techniques, we evaluated the performance (seedling emergence, survival, and biomass production) of three indigenous plant species (Leymus mollis, Lathyrus japonicus, Trisetum spicatum) submitted to different levels of mineral and organic fertilizer additions in both a greenhouse experiment and a field plantation in the village. In the greenhouse experiment, moderate mineral fertilization had positive impacts on seedling emergence and both above ground and below ground biomass of L. mollis. The magnitude of this impact on biomass was greater when mineral fertilization was combined with organic fertilization. The effects of mineral fertilization were negative on the other two species, especially at higher fertilization levels. However, after two growing seasons, a moderate level of mineral fertilizer in the field plantation had positive effects on the cover and above ground biomass of all three species. Overall, organic fertilization from the substrate of a nearby marsh did not enhance plant performance in either experiment. Planting seeds of L. mollis or T. spicatum in combination with a moderate level of mineral fertilization at the time of planting provides a low-cost assisted re-vegetation treatment for subarctic villages.
format Text
author Deshaies, Alexis
Boudreau, Stéphane
Harper, Karen A., 1969-
author_facet Deshaies, Alexis
Boudreau, Stéphane
Harper, Karen A., 1969-
author_sort Deshaies, Alexis
title Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
title_short Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
title_full Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
title_fullStr Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
title_full_unstemmed Assisted Revegetation in a Subarctic Environment: Effects of Fertilization on the Performance of Three Indigenous Plant Species
title_sort assisted revegetation in a subarctic environment: effects of fertilization on the performance of three indigenous plant species
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2009
url http://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/29405
long_lat ENVELOPE(-77.762,-77.762,55.276,55.276)
ENVELOPE(-77.750,-77.750,55.250,55.250)
geographic Arctic
Kuujjuarapik
Whapmagoostui
geographic_facet Arctic
Kuujjuarapik
Whapmagoostui
genre Arctic
Kuujjuarapik
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Kuujjuarapik
Subarctic
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-41.4.434
1523-0430
http://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/29405
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-41.4.434
container_title Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
container_volume 41
container_issue 4
container_start_page 434
op_container_end_page 441
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