Interactions between a salt marsh native perennial (Salicornia virginica) and an exotic annual (Polypogon monspeliensis) under varied salinity and hydroperiod

被引:2
作者
Callaway J.C. [1 ]
Zedler J.B. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Pac. Estuarine Research Laboratory, San Diego State University, San Diego
[2] Botany Department and Arboretum, University of Wisconsin, Madison
关键词
annual grass; competition; exotic invaders; fresh water inflows; germination; mediterranean; waterlogging; wetland;
D O I
10.1023/A:1008224204102
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
An exotic grass invades salt marshes of southern California in very wet years and where there are sewage spills or urban runoff. A series of growth-chamber, mesocosm, and greenhouse experiments explored whether soil salinity and/or waterlogging could explain invasion patterns. In all experiments, salinity significantly affected the growth and distribution of Polypogon monspeliensis (rabbit-foot grass, an exotic annual gras) and Salicornia virginica (pickleweed, a native perennial succulent). High salinities caused a greater reduction in seed germination rates for P. monspeliensis than for S. virginica, indicating that high salinity limits establishment and the spread of this exotic grass. At Tijuana Estuary, fresh water inputs to tidal mesocosms lowered soil salinities, increased cover of P. monspeliensis, and decreased cover of S. virginica. Polypogon monspeliensis outcompeted S. virginica under all salinity and hydrology treatments in the greenhouse experiment. Seasonally-low soil salinities caused by winter runoff and anthropogenic fresh water inputs are the likely factors controlling annual variations in the distribution of P. monspeliensis in southern California salt marshes. Our understanding of the causes of invasion is readily applicable to management: local invasions may be reversed by adding salt, and larger scale problems could be avoided by reinstating more natural hydrologic regimes.
引用
收藏
页码:179 / 194
页数:15
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
Adam P., Saltmarsh Ecology, (1990)
[2]  
Beare P.A., Zedler J.B., Cattail invasion and persistence in a coastal salt marsh: The role of salinity reduction, Estuaries, 10, pp. 165-170, (1987)
[3]  
Boland J., Zedler J.B., Maintaining tidal flows in southern California lagoons, Tidal Wetland Restoration: A Scientific Perspective and Southern California Focus, pp. 11-20, (1996)
[4]  
Waste Discharge Requirements for Irvine Ranch Water District's Wetland Water Supply Project, (1996)
[5]  
Callaway J.C., Zedler J.B., Ross D.L., Using tidal salt marsh mesocosms to aid wetland restoration, Restor. Ecol., 5, pp. 135-146, (1997)
[6]  
Callaway R.M., Facilitative and interfering effects of Arthrocnemum subterminale on winter annuals, Ecology, 75, pp. 681-686, (1994)
[7]  
Callaway R.M., Jones S., Ferren Jr. W.R., Parikh A., Ecology of a mediterranean-climate estuarine wetland at Carpinteria, California: Plant distributions and soil salinity in the upper marsh, Can. J. Bot., 68, pp. 1139-1146, (1990)
[8]  
Callaway R.M., Sabraw C.S., Effects of variable precipitation on the structure and diversity of a California salt marsh community, J. Veg. Sci., 5, pp. 433-438, (1994)
[9]  
Corre J.-J., Environmental structures and variation in coastal vegetation of the Golfe du Lion (France), Vegetatio, 61, pp. 15-22, (1985)
[10]  
Ferren Jr. W.R., Carpintcria Salt Marsh: Environment, History, and Botanical Resources of a Southern California Estuary, (1985)