Journal article
Factors driving natural regeneration beneath a planted urban forest
DA Doroski, AJ Felson, MA Bradford, MP Ashton, EE Oldfield, RA Hallett, SE Kuebbing
Urban Forestry and Urban Greening | Published : 2018
Abstract
Cities around the world are investing in urban forest plantings as a form of green infrastructure. The aim is that these plantations will develop into naturally-regenerating native forest stands. However, woody plant recruitment is often cited as the most limiting factor to creating self-sustaining urban forests. As such, there is interest in site treatments that promote recruitment of native woody species and simultaneously suppress woody non-native recruitment. We tested how three, common site treatments—compost, nurse shrubs, and tree species composition (six-species vs. two-species)—affected woody plant recruitment in 54 experimental plots beneath a large-scale tree planting within a hig..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Hixon Center at Yale University and the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies for funding; The Yale Urban Ecology and Design Lab and Bradford Lab at Yale for support; the US Forest Service and New York Restoration Project for logistical support; Research Analysis, Writing, and Communication Lab at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies for feedback on the manuscript; and two independent reviewers for providing helpful comments on the manuscript.