Seagrasses and Sea Meadows: 2000
Publications
Author: Worm,
B. and Reusch, T.B.H.
Title: Do nutrient availability and plant density
limit seagrass colonization in the Baltic Sea?
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
200: 159-166, 2000.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Seagrasses continue to decline at an alarming rate throughout the
planet's temperate regions. After a decline recolonization or
restoration starts from small patches of single shoots which then
propagate vegetatively. We investigated the effects of plant
density within a patch and nutrient resources on growth and
survival of eelgrass (Zostera marina L.), the dominant
seagrass species in the northern temperate zone. We created small
(0.5 m(2)) eelgrass patches by planting single shoots in circular
plots at high (20 cm) and low (40 cm distance between shoots)
density. In a factorial design, the sediment was nutrient-enriched
(1) through biodeposition of transplanted mussels (Mytilus
edulis L.) (2) by a slow-release NPK-fertilizer or (3) not
enriched. The experiment was run over 1 growth period at a
relatively nutrient-poor site (<30 mu mol NH4+ l(-1) porewater)
in the Baltic Sea. Mussels increased NH4+ concentrations and the
fertilizer increased both NH4+ and PO43- in the sediment porewater
and the overlying water column, but this had only limited effects
on eelgrass shoot growth rates and increase in shoot density,
which were high overall (up to 75 mm shoot(-1) d(-1), doubling
shoot density every 3 mo). In contrast, increased plant density
had clear positive effects on shoot growth, areal expansion of
patches and increase in shoot density. These results suggest that
nutrient availability is not a major factor in eelgrass patch
colonization or survival in the Baltic. Positive interactions
among eelgrass shoots appear to be more important than competitive
processes, during the early stages of recolonization.
|