|
Salt Water Marshes: 2003 Publications
Minchinton, T.E. Precipitation
during El Nino correlates with increasing spread of Phragmites australis in
New England, USA, coastal marshes. Marine Ecology Progress
Series 242: 305-309, 2002.
© Inter-Research
Notes: The
grass Phragmites australis has historically been restricted
to the relatively benign upper border of coastal marshes, but over the
past century, and particularly in recent decades, it has been spreading
aggressively in New England throughout brackish and salt marshes with
high soil salinities that are physiologically stressful to the plant.
Here I tested the hypothesis that variations in climatic conditions,
particularly increased precipitation during the 1997-98 El Nino event,
buffer harsh abiotic conditions and enhance the performance of this nuisance
species. I monitored the growth and reproductive output of P. australis in
the year before, during, and after the 1997-98 El Nino in coastal brackish
marshes of southern New England, USA. During the El Nino year, P.
australis produced on average 30% more shoots, which were 25% taller,
and yielded an order of magnitude more inflorescences than in the other
2 years. Soil porewater salinities were negatively related to precipitation
during the 3 years of the study, and the growing season during the El
Nino year was one of the wettest of the past century. Consequently, increased
precipitation during El Nino may facilitate the spread of less salt-tolerant
nuisance and invasive species throughout brackish and salt marshes.
|