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Fahselt, D. 2007. Is transplanting an effective means of preserving vegetation?
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE BOTANIQUE. 85(10):1007-1017.
Address:
Fahselt, D, Univ Western Ontario, Dept Biol, London, ON N6K 5B7, Canada
Transplantation to new locations is used widely to propagate
horticultural and agricultural species but is also promoted as a means
of relocating whole communities that stand in the way of development.
It may be used as well to move vegetation from the field for
experimentation under controlled conditions. Transplantation has not in
the past been considered a reliable means of conserving threatened
species or reproducing functional characteristics of natural
communities, and has been regarded by many as highly ineffective.
However, its potential must now be re-examined because of the many
recent transplant attempts as well as advances in related fields.
Recent trials illustrate that individual endangered species are still
particularly difficult to transplant and displaced multi-species sods
are almost always changed in the process. Exact reconstruction of
communities from individual components is next to impossible because
the full complement of species, including critical microbial
components, is almost never known. Owing to a limited understanding of
phenology, reproduction, functional roles, and interrelationships among
constituent microbes, cryptogams, vascular plants, and fauna,
transplants may be placed into sites with both biological and physical
insufficiencies. Genetic diversity may be lost or, if genotypes from
diverse sources are mixed, outbreeding depression may result. Recent
advances in soil science, microbial ecology, and population genetics
have in some cases improved the effectiveness of transplantation, but
new insights mainly permit a fuller appreciation of the causes of
failure. Home-site advantage has been demonstrated, and habitat
protection appears to be the best and perhaps only reliable way of
preserving intact natural communities and rare species. Furthermore,
experimentation with vegetational mats under controlled conditions may
have little relevance to natural ecosystems.
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