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Research ArticleArticles

Initial Transplant Size and Microsite Influence Transplant Survivorship and Growth of a Threatened Dune Thistle

Samniqueka J. Halsey, Timothy J. Bell and Marlin Bowles
Ecological Restoration, March 2017, 35 (1) 52-59; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/er.35.1.52
Samniqueka J. Halsey
(corresponding author), The Morton Arboretum, 4100 IL Route 53, Lisle, IL 60532. Current Address: Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61081, USA, .
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Timothy J. Bell
The Morton Arboretum, 4100 IL Route 53, Lisle, IL 6053; Department of Biological Sciences, Chicago State University, 9501 South King Drive, Chicago, IL 60628, USA.
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Marlin Bowles
The Morton Arboretum, 4100 IL Route 53, Lisle, IL 60532.
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Abstract

Identifying optimal transplant size and microsite requirements are critical challenges facing restoration practitioners, and refining this information may lead to more cost effective decisions. In this study, we evaluate the effects of transplant size and microsite on restoration success of the federal threatened Cirsium pitcheri (Pitcher’s thistle), a monocarpic perennial restricted to shoreline sand dunes of the Great Lakes in the United States, using a ten-year dataset. Using general and generalized mixed linear models, we determined how microsite variables influenced first-year-transplant survival and subsequent growth. Our data show a higher probability of first-year survival associated with larger transplants. We also found greater plant growth at higher elevations while plants on steeper slopes are smaller the year after they are transplanted. These results have implications for restoration success, which may be maximized by regulating transplant size and selecting habitat.

  • Cirsium pitcheri
  • dune topography
  • Great Lakes
  • plant reintroductions
  • restoration

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Ecological Restoration: 35 (1)
Ecological Restoration
Vol. 35, Issue 1
1 Mar 2017
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Initial Transplant Size and Microsite Influence Transplant Survivorship and Growth of a Threatened Dune Thistle
Samniqueka J. Halsey, Timothy J. Bell, Marlin Bowles
Ecological Restoration Mar 2017, 35 (1) 52-59; DOI: 10.3368/er.35.1.52

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Initial Transplant Size and Microsite Influence Transplant Survivorship and Growth of a Threatened Dune Thistle
Samniqueka J. Halsey, Timothy J. Bell, Marlin Bowles
Ecological Restoration Mar 2017, 35 (1) 52-59; DOI: 10.3368/er.35.1.52
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Keywords

  • Cirsium pitcheri
  • dune topography
  • Great Lakes
  • plant reintroductions
  • restoration
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