Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida 33620 USA.
Ecology. 2012 Jul;93(7):1648-58. doi: 10.1890/11-1430.1.
Field experiments were conducted at a black mangrove-salt-marsh ecotone in southwest Florida (U.S.A.) to investigate retention of propagules of the black mangrove, Avicennia germinans, by salt-marsh plants as a mechanism of facilitation operating on recruitment success at landward boundaries. Buoyant A. germinans propagules are dispersed by tides, and stranding is required for establishment; therefore, processes that enable stranding should facilitate mangrove recruitment. We expected the physical structure of salt-marsh vegetation to define propagule retention capacity, and we predicted that salt-marsh plants with distinct growth forms would differentially retain propagules. Experimental monoculture plots (1 m2) of salt-marsh plants with different growth forms (Sporobolus virginicus [grass], Sesuvium portulacastrum [succulent forb], and Batis maritima [succulent scrub]) were created, and A. germinans propagules were emplaced into these plots and monitored over time. For comparison, propagules were also placed into natural polyculture plots (1 m2). Polyculture plots contained at least two of the salt-marsh plant taxa selected for monoculture treatments, and S. virginicus was always present within these polyculture plots. Natural polyculture plots retained 59.3% +/- 11.0% (mean +/- SE) of emplaced propagules. Monocultures varied in their propagule retention capacities with plots of S. virginicus retaining on average 65.7% +/- 11.5% of transplanted propagules compared to 7.2% +/- 1.8% by B. maritima and 5.0% +/- 1.9% by S. portulacastrum. Plots containing S. virginicus retained a significantly greater percentage of emplaced propagules relative to the two succulent salt-marsh taxa. Furthermore, propagule entrapment, across all treatments, was strongly correlated with salt-marsh structure (r2 = 0.6253, P = 0.00001), which was estimated using an indirect quantitative metric (lateral obstruction) calculated from digital images of plots. Overall, our findings imply that entrapment of propagules by salt-marsh plants may be facilitative if propagules are dispersed beyond the established tree line by spring or storm tides, and that facilitation may be sustained over time. We conclude that salt-marsh ecotone permeability may modulate landward encroachment by A. germinans, and that interactions among the early life history stages of black mangroves and neighboring plants may direct community responses to climate change.
在美国佛罗里达州西南部的黑红树林-盐沼生态交错区进行了野外实验,以研究黑红树林(Avicennia germinans)的繁殖体在盐沼植物中的保留情况,作为一种在向陆地边界的繁殖成功中起促进作用的机制。有浮力的 A. germinans 繁殖体被潮水分散,并且需要搁浅才能建立;因此,促进搁浅的过程应该有利于红树林的繁殖。我们预计盐沼植被的物理结构将决定繁殖体的保留能力,并且我们预测具有不同生长形式的盐沼植物将不同程度地保留繁殖体。创建了具有不同生长形式的盐沼植物(Sporobolus virginicus [草],Sesuvium portulacastrum [肉质植物]和 Batis maritima [肉质灌木])的实验单种种植区(1 m2),并将 A. germinans 繁殖体放置在这些种植区中,并随时间进行监测。为了比较,还将繁殖体放置在自然多物种种植区(1 m2)中。多物种种植区包含至少两种用于单种处理的盐沼植物分类群,并且 S. virginicus 始终存在于这些多物种种植区中。自然多物种种植区保留了 59.3% +/- 11.0%(平均值 +/- SE)的放置繁殖体。单种种植区的繁殖体保留能力不同,其中 S. virginicus 种植区平均保留了 65.7% +/- 11.5%的移植繁殖体,而 B. maritima 种植区仅保留了 7.2% +/- 1.8%,S. portulacastrum 种植区仅保留了 5.0% +/- 1.9%。与两种肉质盐沼植物相比,含有 S. virginicus 的种植区保留了更多的放置繁殖体。此外,在所有处理中,繁殖体的截留都与盐沼结构密切相关(r2 = 0.6253,P = 0.00001),这是通过对种植区的数字图像进行计算得出的间接定量度量(横向阻塞)来估计的。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,如果繁殖体被春季或风暴潮散布到已建立的林线之外,那么盐沼植物对繁殖体的截留可能是有利的,并且这种促进作用可能会随着时间的推移而持续。我们得出的结论是,盐沼生态交错区的渗透性可能会调节黑红树林向陆地边界的侵袭,并且黑红树林和邻近植物的早期生活史阶段之间的相互作用可能会指导对气候变化的群落反应。