Articles | Volume 11, issue 7
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-2099-2014
© Author(s) 2014. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Special issue:
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-2099-2014
© Author(s) 2014. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Surtsey and Mount St. Helens: a comparison of early succession rates
R. del Moral
Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA
B. Magnússon
Icelandic Institute of Natural History, Urriðaholtsstræti 6–8, P.O. Box 125, 220 Garðabær, Iceland
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Cited
25 citations as recorded by crossref.
- Beginning of Vegetation Succession on Lava Flows from the 2012–2013 Eruption of Tolbachik Volcano, Kamchatka S. Grishin et al.
- Effects of a severe storm on seagrass meadows A. Oprandi et al.
- Risk and reward: Explosive eruptions and obsidian lithic resource at Nabro volcano (Eritrea) C. Oppenheimer et al.
- Volcanic ash deposition as a selection mechanism towards woodiness C. Beierkuhnlein et al.
- Testing conceptual models of early plant succession across a disturbance gradient C. Chang et al.
- New Multicentury Evidence for Dispersal Limitation during Primary Succession K. Makoto & S. Wilson
- Primary plant successions of forest belt vegetation on the Tolbachinskii Dol volcanic plateau (Kamchatka) A. Korablev & V. Neshataeva
- Spatiotemporal dynamics of plant diversity and endemism during primary succession on an oceanic‐volcanic island S. Irl et al.
- Differences in canopy and understorey diversities after the eruptions of Mount Usu, northern Japan — Impacts of early forest management L. Végh & S. Tsuyuzaki
- Accumulation of nitrogen and organic matter during primary succession of Leymus arenarius dunes on the volcanic island Surtsey, Iceland G. Stefansdottir et al.
- Biological legacies promote succession and soil development on tephra from the Puyehue‐Cordon Caulle eruption (2011) N. Ferreiro et al.
- Multiple assessments of succession rates on Mount St. Helens R. del Moral & C. Chang
- Effects of seabird nitrogen input on biomass and carbon accumulation after 50 years of primary succession on a young volcanic island, Surtsey N. Leblans et al.
- Plant colonization, succession and ecosystem development on Surtsey with reference to neighbouring islands B. Magnússon et al.
- Primary conifer succession on a 1915 mudflow in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California C. Glenn et al.
- Multiple mechanisms of early plant community assembly with stochasticity driving the process B. Marteinsdóttir et al.
- Vegetation changes in blown-down and scorched forests 10–26 years after the eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA J. Cook & C. Halpern
- Comparison of vegetation patch dynamics after the eruptions of the volcano Mount Usu, northern Japan, in 1977–1978 and 2000, detected by imagery chronosequence L. Végh & S. Tsuyuzaki
- Spatiotemporal Patterns of Leymus arenarius Nebkhas during Early Primary Succession on the Sub-Arctic Coastal Sand Plains of Iceland S. Greipsson
- Legacy of pre‐eruption vegetation affects ground‐dwelling arthropod communities after different types of volcanic disturbance K. Iida et al.
- Flowering Patterns of Understory Herbs 30 Years after Disturbance of Subalpine Old-Growth Forests by Tephra from Mount St. Helens D. Zobel & J. Antos
- Twenty‐two years of vegetation succession on the constructed Danish island Peberholm S. Nilsson
- Is successional research nearing its climax? New approaches for understanding dynamic communities S. Meiners et al.
- When and where does dispersal limitation matter in primary succession? K. Makoto et al.
- Possibilities and limitations of passive restoration of heavily disturbed sites K. Prach et al.
25 citations as recorded by crossref.
- Beginning of Vegetation Succession on Lava Flows from the 2012–2013 Eruption of Tolbachik Volcano, Kamchatka S. Grishin et al.
- Effects of a severe storm on seagrass meadows A. Oprandi et al.
- Risk and reward: Explosive eruptions and obsidian lithic resource at Nabro volcano (Eritrea) C. Oppenheimer et al.
- Volcanic ash deposition as a selection mechanism towards woodiness C. Beierkuhnlein et al.
- Testing conceptual models of early plant succession across a disturbance gradient C. Chang et al.
- New Multicentury Evidence for Dispersal Limitation during Primary Succession K. Makoto & S. Wilson
- Primary plant successions of forest belt vegetation on the Tolbachinskii Dol volcanic plateau (Kamchatka) A. Korablev & V. Neshataeva
- Spatiotemporal dynamics of plant diversity and endemism during primary succession on an oceanic‐volcanic island S. Irl et al.
- Differences in canopy and understorey diversities after the eruptions of Mount Usu, northern Japan — Impacts of early forest management L. Végh & S. Tsuyuzaki
- Accumulation of nitrogen and organic matter during primary succession of Leymus arenarius dunes on the volcanic island Surtsey, Iceland G. Stefansdottir et al.
- Biological legacies promote succession and soil development on tephra from the Puyehue‐Cordon Caulle eruption (2011) N. Ferreiro et al.
- Multiple assessments of succession rates on Mount St. Helens R. del Moral & C. Chang
- Effects of seabird nitrogen input on biomass and carbon accumulation after 50 years of primary succession on a young volcanic island, Surtsey N. Leblans et al.
- Plant colonization, succession and ecosystem development on Surtsey with reference to neighbouring islands B. Magnússon et al.
- Primary conifer succession on a 1915 mudflow in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California C. Glenn et al.
- Multiple mechanisms of early plant community assembly with stochasticity driving the process B. Marteinsdóttir et al.
- Vegetation changes in blown-down and scorched forests 10–26 years after the eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA J. Cook & C. Halpern
- Comparison of vegetation patch dynamics after the eruptions of the volcano Mount Usu, northern Japan, in 1977–1978 and 2000, detected by imagery chronosequence L. Végh & S. Tsuyuzaki
- Spatiotemporal Patterns of Leymus arenarius Nebkhas during Early Primary Succession on the Sub-Arctic Coastal Sand Plains of Iceland S. Greipsson
- Legacy of pre‐eruption vegetation affects ground‐dwelling arthropod communities after different types of volcanic disturbance K. Iida et al.
- Flowering Patterns of Understory Herbs 30 Years after Disturbance of Subalpine Old-Growth Forests by Tephra from Mount St. Helens D. Zobel & J. Antos
- Twenty‐two years of vegetation succession on the constructed Danish island Peberholm S. Nilsson
- Is successional research nearing its climax? New approaches for understanding dynamic communities S. Meiners et al.
- When and where does dispersal limitation matter in primary succession? K. Makoto et al.
- Possibilities and limitations of passive restoration of heavily disturbed sites K. Prach et al.
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