Zefferman Emily P
Department of Plant Sciences and Graduate Group in Ecology, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 19;10(3):e0120248. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120248. eCollection 2015.
Submersed macrophytes have important ecological functions in many streams, but fostering growth of beneficial native species while suppressing weedy invasives may be challenging. Two approaches commonly used in management of terrestrial plant communities may be useful in this context: (1) altering resource availability and (2) establishing desirable species before weeds can invade (priority effects). However, these approaches are rarely used in aquatic systems, despite widespread need for sustainable solutions to aquatic weed problems. In artificial stream channels in California, USA, I conducted experiments with asexual propagules of non-native invasive Myriophyllum spicatum (Eurasian watermilfoil) and native Elodea nuttallii (western waterweed) to address the questions: (1) How does light availability affect relative performance of the two species?; (2) Does planting the native earlier than the invasive decrease survival or growth rate of the invasive?; and (3) Do light level and priority effects interact? The relative performance between E. nuttallii and M. spicatum had an interesting and unexpected pattern: M. spicatum had higher growth rates than E. nuttallii in the zero and medium shade levels, but had similar performance in the low and high shade levels. This pattern is most likely the result of E. nutallii's sensitivity to both very low and very high light, and M. spicatum's sensitivity to very low light only. Native priority did not significantly affect growth rate or survival of M. spicatum, possibly because of unexpectedly poor growth of the E. nuttallii planted early. This study suggests that altering light levels could be effective in reducing growth of an invasive macrophyte, and for changing the competitive balance between a native and a non-native species in the establishment phase. Further investigations into the use of priority effects and resource alteration for submersed macrophyte management are warranted, given their mixed results in other (limited) studies.
沉水大型植物在许多溪流中具有重要的生态功能,但在促进有益本地物种生长的同时抑制杂草入侵可能具有挑战性。在这种情况下,陆地植物群落管理中常用的两种方法可能会有所帮助:(1)改变资源可用性;(2)在杂草入侵之前建立理想物种(优先效应)。然而,尽管对水生杂草问题的可持续解决方案有广泛需求,但这些方法在水生系统中很少使用。在美国加利福尼亚州的人工溪流渠道中,我使用非本地入侵物种狐尾藻(欧亚水盾草)和本地物种纳氏伊乐藻(西部水蕴草)的无性繁殖体进行了实验,以解决以下问题:(1)光照可用性如何影响这两个物种的相对表现?(2)先种植本地物种而非入侵物种是否会降低入侵物种的存活率或生长速率?(3)光照水平和优先效应是否相互作用?纳氏伊乐藻和狐尾藻之间的相对表现呈现出一种有趣且出乎意料的模式:在零遮荫和中等遮荫水平下,狐尾藻的生长速率高于纳氏伊乐藻,但在低遮荫和高遮荫水平下表现相似。这种模式很可能是由于纳氏伊乐藻对极低和极高光照都敏感,而狐尾藻仅对极低光照敏感。本地物种优先种植并未显著影响狐尾藻的生长速率或存活率,可能是因为早期种植的纳氏伊乐藻生长出乎意料地差。这项研究表明,改变光照水平可能有效地减少入侵大型植物的生长,并在建立阶段改变本地物种和非本地物种之间的竞争平衡。鉴于它们在其他(有限的)研究中结果不一,有必要进一步研究优先效应和资源改变在沉水大型植物管理中的应用。