4.0 Article

Floristic quality assessment for marshes in Alberta's northern prairie and boreal regions

Journal

AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH & MANAGEMENT
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 288-299

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/14634988.2013.825194

Keywords

floristic quality index; biological indicator; wetlands; human disturbance; monitoring and assessment

Funding

  1. Alberta Innovates Technology Future (Alberta Ingenuity Fund)
  2. North American Waterfowl Management Plan Grant

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Floristic quality indices are used to monitor and assess wetland condition by measuring a plant community's tolerance to environmental stress. The aim of our research was to evaluate whether stormwater and reclamation marshes supported wet meadow plant communities that were similar in floristic quality to reference wetlands. Coefficients of conservatism were assigned to a comprehensive list of marsh plant species by nine expert botanists. Various metrics such as the floristic quality index (FQI) were tested for a linear relationship to regional environmental stress gradients in 78 sites in the northern prairies (Aspen Parkland) and 66 sites in the Boreal Plains ecoregions in Alberta, Canada. Sensitivity of floristic quality metrics to the stress gradients was higher when rare species were excluded (species with <5% site-level cover). An adjusted FQI that eliminated bias towards sites with higher species richness yielded the strongest relationship to the stress gradient in both ecoregions (r(2) = 0.55 in northern prairies; r(2) = 0.46 in Boreal Plains). The adjusted FQI also yielded more consistent scores than richness-weighted metrics in a subset of 47 sites where sampling was replicated in dry and wet years (r = 0.75). Including exotic species in floristic quality metrics was not beneficial in the northern prairies where reference sites were located near areas of high urban and agricultural development. This study demonstrates that floristic quality assessments are reasonably good predictors of plant community condition in relation to environmental stress. Results of this study also highlight that existing stormwater ponds and reclamation marshes are not successfully restoring plant community habitat.

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