Predicting plant species diversity in response to disturbance magnitude in grassland remnants of central Alberta

2002 
The Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis states that the greatest species diversity occurs at intermediate levels of disturbance because species coexistence is maintained at a nonequilibrium state and no strong competitor can dominate completely. On the other hand, diversity of exotic species is expected to increase with the disturbance magnitude. These patterns were tested for in this study. The cover of all vascular plants, mosses, and lichens in 1 × 1 m plots across a range of disturbance levels was sampled in 11 remnant grasslands within the Aspen Parkland Ecoregion of central Alberta, western Canada. The Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis was supported for small-scale within-patch diversity for total species richness and Simpson's diversity index. Lower species diversity was found in undisturbed and lightly grazed as well as in highly disturbed plots. Intermediate levels of disturbance had reduced dominance of Festuca hallii (Vasey) Piper and increased abundance of most other species; this gave the h...
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