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Dive into the research topics where Sarah V. Wyse is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah V. Wyse.


Tree Physiology | 2013

Species assemblage patterns around a dominant emergent tree are associated with drought resistance

Sarah V. Wyse; Catriona Macinnis-Ng; Bruce R. Burns; Michael J. Clearwater; Luitgard Schwendenmann

Water availability has long been recognized as an important driver of species distribution patterns in forests. The conifer Agathis australis (D. Don) Lindl. (kauri; Araucariaceae) grows in the species-rich forests of northern New Zealand. It is accompanied by distinctive species assemblages, and during summer the soil beneath A. australis is often significantly drier than soils beneath surrounding broadleaved angiosperm canopy species. We used a shade house dry-down experiment to determine whether species that grow close to A. australis differed in drought tolerance physiology compared with species that rarely grow close to A. australis. Stomatal conductance (g(s)) was plotted against leaf water potential (ψ) to identify drought tolerance strategies. Seedlings of species that occur in close spatial association with A. australis (including A. australis seedlings) were most resistant to drought stress, and all displayed a drought avoidance strategy of either declining gs to maintain ψ or simultaneous declines in g(s) and ψ. The species not commonly occurring beneath A. australis, but abundant in the surrounding forest, were the most drought-sensitive species and succumbed relatively quickly to drought-induced mortality with rapidly declining gs and ψ values. These results were confirmed with diurnal measurements of g(s) and assimilation rates throughout the day, and leaf wilting analysis. We conclude that the varied abilities of the species to survive periods of drought stress as seedlings shapes the composition of the plant communities beneath A. australis trees. Furthermore, forest diversity may be impacted by climate change as the predicted intensification of droughts in northern New Zealand is likely to select for drought-tolerant species over drought-intolerant species.


Ecosystems | 2018

Shoot-Level Flammability of Species Mixtures is Driven by the Most Flammable Species: Implications for Vegetation-Fire Feedbacks Favouring Invasive Species

Sarah V. Wyse; George L. W. Perry; Timothy J. Curran

Abstract Invasive species can cause shifts in vegetation composition and fire regimes by initiating positive vegetation-fire feedbacks. To understand the mechanisms underpinning these shifts, we need to determine how invasive species interact with other species when burned in combination and thus how they may influence net flammability in the communities they invade. Previous studies using litter and ground fuels suggest that flammability of a species mixture is nonadditive and is driven largely by the more-flammable species. However, this nonadditivity has not been investigated in the context of plant invasions nor for canopy fuels. Using whole shoots, we measured the flammability of indigenous-invasive species pairs for six New Zealand indigenous and four globally invasive plant species, along with single-species control burns. Our integrated measure of flammability was clearly nonadditive, and the more-flammable species per pairing had the stronger influence on flammability in 83% of combinations. The degree of nonadditivity was significantly positively correlated with the flammability difference between the species in a pairing. The strength of nonadditivity differed among individual flammability components. Ignitability and combustibility were strongly determined by the more-flammable species per pair, yet both species contributed more equally to consumability and sustainability. Our results suggest mechanisms by which invasive species entrain positive vegetation-fire feedbacks that alter ecosystem flammability, enhancing their invasion. Of the species tested, Hakea sericea and Ulex europaeus are those most likely to increase the flammability of New Zealand ecosystems and should be priorities for management.


International Journal of Wildland Fire | 2016

A quantitative assessment of shoot flammability for 60 tree and shrub species supports rankings based on expert opinion

Sarah V. Wyse; George L. W. Perry; Dean O'Connell; Phillip Holland; M. J. Wright; C. L. Hosted; S. L. Whitelock; I. J. Geary; K. J. L. Maurin; Timothy J. Curran


Austral Ecology | 2014

Distinctive vegetation communities are associated with the long-lived conifer Agathis australis (New Zealand kauri, Araucariaceae) in New Zealand rainforests

Sarah V. Wyse; Bruce R. Burns; Shane D. Wright


Archive | 2013

Effects of Agathis australis (New Zealand kauri) leaf litter on germination and seedling growth differs among plant species

Sarah V. Wyse; Bruce R. Burns


Trees-structure and Function | 2016

Sap flow of the southern conifer, Agathis australis during wet and dry summers

Cate Macinnis-Ng; Sarah V. Wyse; Andrew J. Veale; Luitgard Schwendenmann; Michael J. Clearwater


Landscape and Urban Planning | 2015

Protecting trees at an individual level provides insufficient safeguard for urban forests

Sarah V. Wyse; Jacqueline R. Beggs; Bruce R. Burns; Margaret C. Stanley


Fire | 2017

Managing fire and biodiversity in the wildland-urban interface: A role for green firebreaks

Timothy J. Curran; George L. W. Perry; Sarah V. Wyse; Alam


Ecological Applications | 2017

Exploiting interspecific olfactory communication to monitor predators

Patrick M. Garvey; Alistair S. Glen; Mick N. Clout; Sarah V. Wyse; Margaret Nichols; Roger P. Pech


New Zealand Journal of Ecology | 2018

New Zealand forest dynamics: a review of past and present vegetation responses to disturbance, and development of conceptual forest models

Sarah V. Wyse; Janet M. Wilmshurst; Bruce R. Burns; George L. W. Perry

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