Ic. Wisheu et Pa. Keddy, THE LOW COMPETITIVE ABILITY OF CANADA ATLANTIC COASTAL-PLAIN SHORELINE FLORA - IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATION, Biological Conservation, 68(3), 1994, pp. 247-252
With over 22 nationally or globally significant Atlantic coastal plain
taxa in Canada, there is a need for broadly applicable management str
ategies and the general models that make such strategies possible. Coa
stal plain species occur primarily in infertile areas and/or on shorel
ines exposed to wave wash or seasonal flooding. Experiments show that
coastal plain species are restricted to such areas by the inability to
compete with competitively superior species that occupy fertile, undi
sturbed areas. Coastal plain plants almost always co-occur with either
isoetids or carnivorous species, two well-known stress-tolerant group
s of plants, indicating that coastal plain species are also stress tol
erators. The rarity of coastal plain species is a consequence of limit
ed habitat with low competition intensity, so conservation strategies
should emphasize the preservation of remaining habitat and the mainten
ance of existing levels of infertility, flooding and exposure.