UCSB
Biogeography Lab Publications Abstracts
A Natural History
of Coastal Sage Scrub in Southern California: Regional Floristic
Patterns and Relations to Physical Geography, How It Changes Over
Time, And How Well Reserves Represent Its Biodiversity.
Ph.D. dissertation,
Geography, University of California. Santa Barbara.
Taylor, R. S.
2004.
This dissertation
is a study of coastal sage scrub in coastal southern California.
Research questions concern patterns of species distribution, composition
of major species associations, environmental correlates with species
distributions and changes in vegetation composition and structure
over time. Implications for conservation biology and resource management
of this scarce and rapidly vanishing resource are discussed.
A digital, spatial
database of historic composition in southern Californian shrublands
is constructed by examination of historic documents from an extensive
vegetation survey conducted between 1929 and 1934 by the U. S. Forest
Service (the Vegetation Type Map survey). This data is combined
in a GIS with climate, fire history, environmental and modern land
use data. A subset of 78 plots representing a wide range of site
histories and environmental conditions was resampled in 2000 to
assess vegetation change over 70 years.
In Chapter 1,
I examine general organizing principles of shrubland plant communities
in southern California, with a focus on coastal sage scrub. Classification
and ordination methods are used to describe general patterns of
species abundance and distribution in chaparral and coastal sage
scrub vegetation types. In a more detailed analysis of species associations
and floristic patterns in the coastal sage scrub plots, different
types of coastal sage scrub are described. Physical environmental
effects on the distribution of dominant species are measured. Results
are compared to other published descriptions of coastal sage scrub.
In Chapter 2,
changes in vegetation composition and structure are described. I
compare changes in vegetation composition noted between 1930 and
2000 to environmental factors, patterns of land use, disturbance,
and stand fragmentation caused by urbanization. Air photo interpretation
is used to make broader conclusions about observed changes. Findings
are compared to other studies conducted in similar vegetation types.
In Chapter 3,
I compare distributions of the main species associations derived
in Chapter 1 with modern land use and ownership data to estimate
loss of various coastal sage scrub types. I conduct a gap analysis
to assess representation of coastal sage scrub’s historic
diversity in the Natural Communities Conservation Program (NCCP)
reserve system.
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