• Title/Summary/Keyword: landization succession

Search Result 1, Processing Time 0.014 seconds

Vegetation of Jangdo wetland conserved area in South Korea and its management strategy (장도습지보호지역의 식생 특성과 관리방안)

  • Lee, Seung-Yeon;Hong, Yong-Sik;Jung, Heon-Mo;Lee, Eung-Pill;Kim, Eui-Joo;Park, Jae-Hoon;Jung, Young-Ho;Cho, Kyu-Tae;You, Young-Han
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
    • /
    • v.37 no.1
    • /
    • pp.109-118
    • /
    • 2019
  • This study was carried out to investigate the vegetation of wetland and terrestrial lands in Jangdo wetland conserved area in Korea and to analyze the characteristics of the vegetation changes in the recent years. From the plant community, there were evergreen broad-leaved forests of the Machilus thunbergii, Castanopsis cuspidata, and Machilus thunbergii-Castanopsis cuspidata communities. Moreover, there were deciduous broad-leaved forests of the Salix koreensis, Mallotus japonicus, Mallotus japonicus-Pueraria thunbergiana and Celtis sinensis communities. Additionally, there were shrub forests of the Rosa multiflora-Rubus hirsutus, grassland of Molinia japonica-Miscanthus sacchariflorus and Miscanthus sacchariflorus-Imperata cylindrica communities, and plantation forest of the Pseudosasa japonica community. The area of the wetland vegetation (15%) was much narrower than that of the terrestrial land vegetation (85%). Comparing these results with those of the past 10 years, the wetland plant communities decreased by one-third and the proportion of neutral or dry plant communities increased. In order to mitigate landization succession of the wetland and maintain native wetland vegetation in this area, the expansion of the Salix koreensis community must be controlled to a suitable scale. In addition, it is urgently required to remove the invasive non-wetland plants, such as Pseudosasa japonica and Pueraria thunbergiana.