4.4 Article

Water level fluctuations and phenological responses in a salt marsh succulent

Journal

AQUATIC BOTANY
Volume 153, Issue -, Pages 58-66

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquabot.2018.11.003

Keywords

Cover; Emergence; Estuary; Habitat characteristics; Life strategy; Salicornia tegetaria

Funding

  1. Water Research Commission
  2. National Research Foundation
  3. Nelson Mandela University

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The succulent salt marsh plant Salicornia tegetaria occurs in both temporarily open / closed (TOCE) and permanently open estuaries (POE) where it experiences a wide range of physicochemical conditions in South African estuaries. The study investigated the characteristics of this plant in relation to water level in a TOCE and a POE and showed that cover was stable in the permanently open estuary but changed in response in water level in the temporarily open/closed system. Monthly expansion in S. tegetaria cover was 46% compared to 5.2% in the POE. In the TOCE the life cycle took four months to complete, seedlings emerged two days after the water level dropped, and the habitat was exposed. This was despite the mouth being closed for the whole study period and a mean water depth inundation of 27 +/- 6 cm. Plants in the TOCE produced significantly more inflorescences (409 +/- 79 per m(2)) and seed (45 542 +/- 9 212 per m(2)), compared to the plants in the POE where water level was stable (87 +/- 9 inflorescences per m(2) and 7 092 +/- 775 seeds per m(2)). A large sediment seedbank (9 758 seeds m(-2)) in the TOCE ensures germination when water level drops and conditions become favourable for establishment. These data are important as they indicate that S. tegetaria is a remarkably adaptive species that can grow over a wide range of physicochemical conditions that will allow the species to persist in the face of future future sea level rise and anthropogenic pressures.

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