Arid
DOI10.1672/1-20
Saltcedar: Distribution, abundance, and dispersal mechanisms, northern Montana, USA
Pearce, CM; Smith, DG
通讯作者Pearce, CM
来源期刊WETLANDS
ISSN0277-5212
出版年2003
卷号23期号:2页码:215-228
英文摘要

Introduced saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima, T. chinensis, and their hybrids) reaches its northward distribution in the Great Plains in Montana, USA. We mapped the locations, patterns of abundance, and ages of saltcedar along the Musselshell River and Fort Peck Reservoir in northeastern Montana to identify concentrations of plants that could be used to infer introduction location, establishment year, and mechanisms of dispersal. We estimated the presence of 24,500 plants on the Musselshell River over a river distance of 240 km, with concentrations at three nodes close to Roundup (2,000 plants, seedlings to 24 years), Melstone’ (6,000 plants, seedlings to 23 years), and the mouth of the river at Fort Peck Reservoir (10,000 plants, seedlings to at least 11 years). Concentrations at Roundup and Melstone probably originated from urban plantings in the 1960s. The third concentration may have established from seeds and plant pieces washed downriver during floods and deposited in the hydraulic backwater of the Musselshell River delta at Fort Peck Reservoir. We believe there may be one-half to one million plants on Fort Peck Reservoir, with concentration nodes at recreation areas on the south shore. We estimated 3,500 mature saltcedar to be present at the Devils Creek Recreation Area, more than 11,000 plants at Hell Creek Recreation Area, and more than 40,000 plants at 6 sites at the south end of Dry Arm close to the Nelson Creek Recreation Area and mouth of Big Dry Creek. The oldest plants on the reservoir were 21 to 33 years old in 2001. Based on these ages, we suggest that saltcedar arrived at the south shore of Fort Peck Reservoir in the mid- to late 1960s, which means that it must have dispersed from the Bighorn/Yellowstone River system soon after it became established in southern Montana. Although wind dispersal and ornamental plantings cannot be ruled out as primary transport mechanisms to the reservoir, the concentrations and ages of saltcedar at recreation areas suggest that seeds and other plant propagules were also transported to the reservoir by earth-moving equipment during site construction between 1966 and the mid-1980s and later by boats and their towing vehicles. Saltcedar was dispersed away from these nodes by wind and water. As Tamarix ramosissima and T. chinensis originated in the cold dry deserts of northeastern Asia, saltcedar may not be limited in its northward expansion by the cold winters, short growing seasons, and periodic droughts characteristic of the northern Great Plains in Canada.


英文关键词saltcedar Tamarix northern distribution introduced trees transport and dispersal mechanisms Musselshell River Fort Peck Reservoir Montana northern Great Plains Missouri River watershed
类型Article
语种英语
国家Canada
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000184016200001
WOS关键词UNITED-STATES ; TAMARIX RAMOSISSIMA ; PLANT INVASIONS ; RUSSIAN OLIVE ; SEEDLINGS ; ECOLOGY ; SPREAD ; RIVER ; RANGE
WOS类目Ecology ; Environmental Sciences
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/146005
作者单位(1)Univ Western Ontario, Dept Geog, London, ON N6A 5C2, Canada;(2)Univ Calgary, Dept Geog, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Pearce, CM,Smith, DG. Saltcedar: Distribution, abundance, and dispersal mechanisms, northern Montana, USA[J],2003,23(2):215-228.
APA Pearce, CM,&Smith, DG.(2003).Saltcedar: Distribution, abundance, and dispersal mechanisms, northern Montana, USA.WETLANDS,23(2),215-228.
MLA Pearce, CM,et al."Saltcedar: Distribution, abundance, and dispersal mechanisms, northern Montana, USA".WETLANDS 23.2(2003):215-228.
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