The Mechanisms Behind Alternative Community States: Understanding Producer Composition in Temporary and Semipermanent Wetlands

The Mechanisms Behind Alternative Community States: Understanding Producer Composition in Temporary and Semipermanent Wetlands
Author: Sigrid Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

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In many ecological communities, variation in composition appears discontinuous, in that a discrete set of community states (or distinct taxa assemblages) have been observed repeatedly in one ecosystem type. Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain this discontinuous variation in community composition over space and time. I examined the applicability of these hypotheses to understand the structure of producer communities of temporary and semipermanent wetlands in Michigan, USA. I identified several distinct community states, with each characterized by dominance of particular functional groups (submerged, floating, or emergent plants) or the absence of plants throughout a season. I developed a framework for differentiating among these hypotheses by characterizing how community composition varies (1) over space, (2) over time, and (3) with possible drivers. I applied this framework to my survey data of the producer communities of wetlands over four years (n = 21-35 wetlands). I found that several environmental variables (pH, light, depth, and permanence) were associated with community composition based on multivariate analyses in these wetlands. Alternative stable states or interactions among several drivers were the most strongly supported explanations for the expression of multiple community states. I further examined factors driving dominance of free-floating plants in wetland producer communities in two additional studies. I evaluated the roles of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and N:P ratio in driving floating plant dominance in a separate survey dataset and in a field experiment. In the observational work, N, P, and N:P ratios all were associated with producer community composition. I manipulated the three variables in enclosures in two experimental ponds with floating and submerged plants. I found N supply rates drove these patterns more strongly than P and N:P. However, submerged plant composition and pH levels also affected floating plant responses. Finally, I evaluated the role of light in changing the response of floating plants to N. In my observational data, I found that submerged and emergent plants only dominated wetlands with open tree canopies, and that floating plants more consistently dominated systems at intermediate N levels when light availability was low. To investigate this relationship further, I manipulated light, N, and initial densities of floating plants in an outdoor mesocosm experiment with floating plants and algae. In this experiment, I found that floating plants exhibited a light x nutrient interaction. Competition with other plant groups and photoinhibition are discussed as possible mechanisms driving these patterns. In summary, a complex suite of environmental variables drives the expression of multiple community states in temporary and semipermanent wetlands. While there is some support for the hypothesis that nutrients and light drive alternative stable states between floating plants and other producers, several other variables play important roles in regulating dominance of floating plants as well.

Wetland Ecology

Wetland Ecology
Author: Paul A. Keddy
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 632
Release: 2000-09-28
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780521783675

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Wetlands are among some of the most productive and biologically diverse ecosystems on earth. Their very diversity has produced a fragmented area of study where each wetland type has tended to be considered in isolation. In contrast, Paul Keddy - winner of the 2007 National Wetlands Award for Research - provides a synthesis of the existing field of wetland ecology, using a few central themes. These themes include basic characteristics of wetlands, key environmental factors that produce wetland community types and some unifying problems such as assembly rules, restoration and conservation. The volume draws upon a complete range of wetland habitats and geographic regions including Californian vernal pools, Amazonian floodplains and Russian peat bogs. No other book provides ecological syntheses over the entire geographical and habitat range of wetlands, making Wetland Ecology essential reading for anyone planning research or management in wetland habitats, regardless of specific area of interest.

Wetland Plants

Wetland Plants
Author: Julie K. Cronk
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 484
Release: 2016-04-19
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1420032925

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A detailed account of the biology and ecology of vascular wetland plants and their applications in wetland plant science, Wetland Plants: Biology and Ecology presents a synthesis of wetland plant studies and reviews from biology, physiology, evolution, genetics, community and population ecology, environmental science, and engineering. It provides a

Microbiology of wetlands

Microbiology of wetlands
Author: Paul Bodelier
Publisher: Frontiers E-books
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2013-07-08
Genre:
ISBN: 2889191443

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Watersaturated soil and sediment ecosystems (i.e. wetlands) are ecologically as well as economically important systems due to their high productivity, their nutrient (re)cycling capacities and their prominent contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions. Being on the transition between terrestrial and – aquatic ecosystems, wetlands are buffers for terrestrial run off thereby preventing eutrophication of inland as well as coastal waters. The close proximity of oxic-anoxic conditions, often created by wetland plant roots, facilitates the simultaneous activity of aerobic as well as anaerobic microbial communities. Input of nutrients and fast recycling due to active aerobes and anaerobes makes these systems highly productive and therefore attractive for humans as well as many other organisms. Wetlands globally are under high pressure due to anthropogenic activities as well as climate change. Changes of land-use as well as altered hydrology due to climate change will lead to disturbance and loss of these habitats. However, the diversity and functioning of microbial communities in wetlands systems in highly underexplored in comparison to soils and aquatic ecosystems. Given the importance of wetlands and their immediate threats combined with the lack of knowledge on the microbiology of these systems is the basis for this special issue, focusing on the current microbiological knowledge and gaps therein to be assessed in future wetland research. Papers (research papers, reviews, perspectives, opinion papers) are welcomed that focus on all aspects that regulate the functioning and community composition of microbes (i.e. bacteria, archaea, protozoa, fungi) in wetland ecosystems (peat, coastal as well as freshwater marshes, flood plains, rice paddies, littoral zones of lakes etc) from all geographic regions. Welcomed topics are physiology, ecology, functioning, biodiversity, biogeography of microbes involved in nutrient cycling (C, N, P, Fe, Mn), green house gas emissions as well as plant-microbe interactions. These studies can be multidisciplinary and cover topics from the molecular to the community level.