Northern mesic forest understories in
the Lake States are composed of over 250 species of vascular plants, including:
tree seedlings, shrubs, spring ephemeral and summer-green herbs, graminoids and
pteridophytes. While forest understory plant communities respond to a hierarchy
of controls, the importance and significance of the mechanisms affecting
diversity may vary with spatial extent. We examined spatial patterns of
understory diversity in a second-growth northern mesic forest in the Flambeau River State Forest
in northern Wisconsin, USA.
This is the site of a long-term, manipulative experiment that examines the
restoration of old-growth structural characteristics to younger, second-growth
forests. Scale ranged from fine microsite scales, (0.11 m2), gaps (10s-100s
m2) and landscape (280 ha). Spatial analysis shows that at broad
scales patterns were associated with overstory structure and composition, as
well as sapling density. At meso-scales spatial patterns were related to light
transmittance, soil nutrients and sapling density. Fine-scale variability was
associated with the characteristics of individual species, seedling and sapling
density, pit and mound topography, and coarse woody debris. Broad-scale
variability in the overstory interacts with meso-scale variability in soil
texture and topography, as well as fine-scale variability in microsites to
result in unique combinations of plant resources. These patterns of plant
resources effects patterns of species composition and diversity in understory
vegetation. Restoration of patterns of forest ecosystems should occur over
multiple spatial scales to account for the complex interactions that structure
understory plant communities.