Richard D. Porcher’s scientific contributions

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Publications (5)


Noteworthy Collections—South Carolina
  • Article

January 2023

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11 Reads

Castanea

Cecelia N. Dailey

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Richard D. Porcher

Discussion is provided for an occurrence of Macbridea caroliniana thought to be extirpated (Berkeley County) and five new occurrences collected 2019–2020 on the South Carolina Coastal Plain. One new occurrence is a county record (Charleston County). Four new occurrences along the Black River through Berkeley and Williamsburg counties suggest favorable habitat in that region. Findings suggest that this species may be underreported in South Carolina and effort should be placed in identifying disturbed habitat in conserved natural areas that may harbor this rare plant.




Figure 1. Trillium pusillum var. pusillum mean counts (±1SE) based on single leaf (A), triple leaf (B), and flowering (C) individuals starting the year after Hurricane Hugo (1989). Coefficients of variation (CV) for each plot over 26 censuses are listed down the right-hand side of the panel and refer to the temporal variability of each size class. Hurricanes (H), Tropical Storms (TS).
Long-term Demography Study of Trillium pusillum var. pusillum Following Hurricane Hugo in 1989
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 2021

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34 Reads

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1 Citation

Castanea

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Richard Porcher

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[...]

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Brian Owens

Hurricane Hugo was a category five storm in September of 1989 that significantly impacted natural areas along the Carolina coastal plain through wind damage and storm surge flooding. Francis Beidler Forest, an Audubon wildlife sanctuary in Four Holes Swamp, suffered severe damage to its forest canopy. In response to concerns that the rare spring ephemeral Trillium pusillum var. pusillum may be negatively impacted by the loss of the mixed hardwood canopy, we established permanent plots in the spring of 1990 with single leaf, triple leaf, and flowering individuals recorded by Ecology faculty and students at The Citadel. Disruption to the forest canopy would significantly alter forest floor microhabitat conditions negatively affecting T. pusillum var. pusillum population demography. There was no expected negative effect of Hurricane Hugo, and the loss of canopy cover on the population. Evidence suggests that the decrease in canopy cover and increased light was associated with increased flowering. The coefficient of variation, as a measure of cohort variability among years, increased from flowering, to triple leaf, to single leaf across the 29 years of population monitoring. There was a significant positive association between the number of named storms in the previous two and three years and the number of single leaf plants. There was no evidence that the population is decreasing, even though the number of flowering individuals has decreased. The results of this long-term demography suggest that even severe natural disturbances, like hurricanes and tropical storms, may have a positive effect on Trillium population dynamics.

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Citations (2)


... In South Carolina, field experiments were conducted at 2 sites separated by ~25 km (Table 1). The first site was a woodlot at the USDA-ARS Vegetable Laboratory in Charleston which is representative of the Maritime Strand plant community (Porcher and Rayner 2001). The second site was a suburban woodlot in Summerville which is representative of the Lower Coastal Plain plant community (Porcher and Rayner 2001). ...

Reference:

Identification of sex attractants for 6 North American click beetle species in 4 tribes of the Elateridae
A Guide to the Wildflowers of South Carolina
  • Citing Book
  • August 2022

... Small populations are known to be more susceptible to intrinsic and extrinsic stochastic processes relative to large populations (Matthies et al. 2004). Extrinsic stochastic processes in the form of extreme weather events (Menges et al. 2011;Gustafson et al. 2021), disease (Barrett et al. 2008;Fraedrich et al. 2008), or fire (Menges et al. 2006) can also have greater proportional effects on small populations relative to large populations. ...

Long-term Demography Study of Trillium pusillum var. pusillum Following Hurricane Hugo in 1989

Castanea