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Vegetation and soil recovery in wilderness campsites closed to visitor use
Authors:Thomas J Stohlgren  David J Parsons
Institution:(1) Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, National Park Service, 93271 Three Rivers, California, USA
Abstract:Recreational use of wilderness results in impacts to vegetation and soil in trails and campsites. Traditionally, campsite impact studies have compared campsites receiving various levels of use with unused control areas. Field studies in Sequoia National Park, California, indicate that the degree of impact to vegetation and soils also varies within campsites. The central areas of campsites, where trampling is concentrated, show lower plant species diversity, differences in relative species cover, more highly compacted soils, and lower soil nutrient concentrations than do peripheral, moderately trampled, and untrampled areas within the same campsite. Three years after closure to visitor use, the central areas show less increase in mean foliar plant cover, and soils remain more highly compacted than in previously moderately trampled areas of the same sites. Changes in relative species cover over time are used to assess both resiliency to trampling and species composition recovery within campsites closed to visitor use.
Keywords:Vegetation recovery  Soil recovery  Wilderness campsites  Sequoia National Park  Recreational impacts
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