Response of floodplain grassland plant communities to altered water regimes

被引:0
|
作者
Sarah E. Toogood
Chris B. Joyce
Stephen Waite
机构
[1] Halcrow Group Ltd.,School of Environment and Technology
[2] University of Brighton,School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences
[3] University of Brighton,undefined
来源
Plant Ecology | 2008年 / 197卷
关键词
Inundation grassland; Flood-meadow; Hydrology; Plant competition; Reciprocal transplant; Floodplain management;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Floodplain grasslands are often composed of a mosaic of plant communities controlled by hydrological regime. This article examines the sensitivity of floodplain grassland plant communities to water regime using reciprocal transplantation of an inundation grassland and a flood-meadow within an English floodplain. Experimental treatments comprised control, transplanted and lifted plots; the last treatment, in order to elucidate any disturbance effects of transplantation. Plant community response was analysed using species abundance and their ecological traits. Results from both communities showed substantial annual variations related to hydrology, including significant species changes, but generally, vegetation seemed to be responding to drier conditions following a major flood event. This ‘drying’ trend was characterised by increased species diversity, a greater abundance of competitive species and fewer typical wetland plants. Transplanted community composition increasingly resembled receptor sites and transplant effects were most pronounced the first year after treatment for both vegetation types. Differential responses to water regime were detected for the two plant communities. The inundation grassland community was particularly dynamic with a composition that rapidly reflected drying conditions following the major flood, but transplantation into a drier flood-meadow site prompted little additional change. The flood-meadow community appeared more resistant to post-inundation drying, but was sensitive to increased wetness caused by transplantation into inundation grassland, which significantly reduced six species while none were significantly favoured. The effects of disturbance caused by lifting the transplants were limited in both communities, although five species showed significant annual fluctuations. The study shows that small alterations in water regime can prompt rapid vegetation changes and significant plant species responses in floodplain grasslands, with effects probably magnified through competitive interactions. The dynamic properties of floodplain vegetation demonstrated by this study suggest that its classification, management and monitoring are challenging and ideally should be based on long-term studies.
引用
收藏
页码:285 / 298
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Response of floodplain grassland plant communities to altered water regimes
    Toogood, Sarah E.
    Joyce, Chris B.
    Waite, Stephen
    [J]. PLANT ECOLOGY, 2008, 197 (02) : 285 - 298
  • [2] Microbial communities in floodplain ecosystems in relation to altered flow regimes and experimental flooding
    Doering, Michael
    Freimann, Remo
    Antenen, Nadine
    Roschi, Alexia
    Robinson, Christopher T.
    Rezzonico, Fabio
    Smits, Theo H. M.
    Tonolla, Diego
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 788
  • [3] Response of lotic microbial communities to altered water source and nutritional state in a glaciated alpine floodplain
    Freimann, Remo
    Buergmann, Helmut
    Findlay, Stuart E. G.
    Robinson, Christopher T.
    [J]. LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2013, 58 (03) : 951 - 965
  • [4] Plasticity of plant silicon and nitrogen concentrations in response to water regimes varies across temperate grassland species
    Klotz, Marius
    Schaller, Joerg
    Feldhaar, Heike
    Dengler, Juergen
    Gebauer, Gerhard
    Aas, Gregor
    Weissflog, Anita
    Engelbrecht, Bettina M. J.
    [J]. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2022, 36 (12) : 3211 - 3222
  • [5] Evaluation of Sentinel-2 time-series for mapping floodplain grassland plant communities
    Rapinel, Sebastien
    Mony, Cendrine
    Lecoq, Lucie
    Clement, Bernard
    Thomas, Alban
    Hubert-Moy, Laurence
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 223 : 115 - 129
  • [6] Effects of raised water levels on wet grassland plant communities
    Toogood, Sarah E.
    Joyce, Chris B.
    [J]. APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2009, 12 (03) : 283 - 294
  • [7] Effect of water regime changes on the diversity of plant communities in floodplain forests
    Madera, P
    [J]. EKOLOGIA-BRATISLAVA, 2001, 20 : 116 - 129
  • [8] Experimentally altered rainfall regimes and host root traits affect grassland arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities
    Deveautour, Coline
    Donn, Suzanne
    Power, Sally A.
    Bennett, Alison E.
    Powell, Jeff R.
    [J]. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2018, 27 (08) : 2152 - 2163
  • [9] A multi-scale ecohydrological model for assessing floodplain wetland response to altered flow regimes
    Hipsey, M. R.
    Vogwill, R.
    Farmer, D.
    Busch, B. D.
    [J]. 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION (MODSIM2011), 2011, : 3712 - 3718
  • [10] WATER RELATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS, PLANT-POPULATIONS AND COMMUNITIES IN A GRASSLAND ECOSYSTEM
    RYCHNOVSKA, M
    [J]. EKOLOGIA CSFR, 1990, 9 (02): : 161 - 170