Ryan, Paul, ENTS,

I posted to see what others had observed about the species and and to see what 
everyone thought about the case of the difference in vegetation. I will not 
dismiss the idea of shade having an impact, but I thin something else is going 
on well.  There is a long history of chemical warfare between plants and 
insects.  The plants make their leaves poisonous or taste bad to insects to 
limit their feeding.  it seems reasonable that they employ the same tactics to 
cut down on competitition from other plants.  There are several well known 
examples of this. I bet the process is much more common than anybody realizes 
at this time.

Of you choices below I thin the hawthorns are arriving and modifying the site. 
When you look at ld field settings there commonly are patches of hawthorns.  
They seem to grow in small groves well before other species are successfully 
colonizing the old fields.  The patches of hawthorns themselves are pretty much 
the only species growing in these patches to the exclusion of other species. 
The ground in these patches is commonly pretty bare with only dead leaves from 
the trees on the ground surface. The only other species that seem to be able to 
grow among the hawthorns are apple trees and in some areas grapevines.  Root 
competition is a possibility.  I am still leaning toward alleopathy as the 
major mechanism involved, but these other ideas could provide an alternative 
explanation.  Thanks for the attached document.

Ed Frank

"Oh, I call myself a scientist.  I wear a white coat and probe a monkey every 
now and then, but if I put monetary gain ahead of preserving nature...I 
couldn't live with myself" - Professor Hubert Farnsworth
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ryan McEwan 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 9:14 AM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Alleopathy


  Very interesting observation and photos!

  One tricky thing is understanding the history.  Are those hawthorns growing 
in those spots because of something unique about the spot, which makes it less 
conducive to grasses? Or are hawthorns randomly arriving and then modifying the 
site.

  If the latter, you still have the trick of trying to separate resource 
competition from allelopathic effects.  Attached is a very interesting paper 
from Ray Callaway's dissertation research where changes in grasses under the 
canopy of oaks in california was apparently related to competition from surface 
roots.  

  Its funny, in the entomology literature allelopathy is used to describe the 
anti insect herbivore chemistry in plants, and it is well-recognized 
(pedestrian, even), but it is a subject of some debate among plant ecologists.


  ryan


   
  On Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 6:11 PM, Paul Jost <[email protected]> wrote:

    Ed, 

    I agree with most of what you have said.  However, hawthorns have a nearly 
unique branching habit that is wide spreading just a few feet above the ground, 
casting shade most of the day.  Other taller and/or more upright trees only 
block sun briefly during mid-day.  That being said, I have seen some cases of 
the vegetation change abruptly at the drip line of hawthorns, too.  That 
suggests that the shade may have only a secondary influence.

    Paul 



    On Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 4:52 PM, Edward Frank <[email protected]> wrote:

      Paul,

      I have considered this.  It is my impression that the hawthorns are 
encroaching into the fields covered by the grass.  I think that many of the 
smaller hawthorns are younger than the age of the grass fields.  Shade 
intolerance could be a part of the effect I am seeing, but under other 
scattered trees of other species that occur within or surround the grassy areas 
the grass is growing underneath them without any of these visible differences. 
The shade from these trees do not seem to be limiting the growth of the grass. 
The grass does not seem to be affected noticeably by the shade of these trees 
and the hawthorns are not any more foliage dense than  these other species.    
It is just under the hawthorns that I see this effect.  That is why I am think 
alleopathy rather than shade effects.  

      Ed

      "Oh, I call myself a scientist.  I wear a white coat and probe a monkey 
every now and then, but if I put monetary gain ahead of preserving nature...I 
couldn't live with myself" - Professor Hubert Farnsworth
        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: Paul Jost 
        To: [email protected] 
        Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 5:15 PM
        Subject: [ENTS] Re: Alleopathy


        Ed,

        I wonder if those hawthorns predate the reed canary grass and if the 
reed canary grass is too shade intolerant to grow underneath them?  I've seen 
similar effects with hawthorns over other grasses.

        Paul












  -- 
  Ryan McEwan
  The University of Dayton
  http://academic.udayton.edu/RyanMcEwan





  

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