Abstract

Spatial and temporal dynamics of barrier island shrub thickets were investigated on Hog Island, a barrier island along the Eastern Shore peninsula of Virginia. The island thickets are dominated by the actinorhizal shrub, Myrica cerifera. On the accreting, northern half of the island, thickets expanded as swale area increased. Analysis of aerial photographs revealed that total thicket area increased by nearly 400% from 1949 to 1989, paralleling a substantial increase in area for the northern portion of the island. Thicket characteristics varied with the age and position of the three field sites on Hog Island. At the youngest site examined (20 yr), recruitment and shrub growth were high. Shrub growth remained high and recruitment continued in the stable central portions of the island (50 yr). However, at the oldest site near a bay side salt marsh (≈130 yr), recruitment was not evident, shrub growth was reduced, and mortality was most apparent. Several “life stages” for shrub thickets were identified relative to island accretion. After the stabilization of new land, seedlings establish and grow rapidly to form a thicket. Once established, a thicket rapidly expands in the relatively protected, mesic swale environment. Thicket decline follows, characterized by an increase in vine growth on and around the shrubs and the formation of gaps as the thicket breaks up. Spatial variation in M. cerifera thickets on Hog Island is related to length of time soils have been stabilized and, especially, to time since thicket establishment.

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