Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh

The objective of this study is to examine the long-term vegetation dynamics of a prairie marsh following water level stabilization. We hypothesize that disruption of the natural disturbance regime (flood-drought cycles) in prairie marshes increases the influence of competition among macrophyte spec...

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Main Author: Grosshans, Richard E.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2610
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-26102014-01-31T03:31:25Z Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh Grosshans, Richard E. The objective of this study is to examine the long-term vegetation dynamics of a prairie marsh following water level stabilization. We hypothesize that disruption of the natural disturbance regime (flood-drought cycles) in prairie marshes increases the influence of competition among macrophyte species. An increase in competitive interactions results in elimination of subordinate species, while consolidating the abundance of competitive dominants. We used colour infrared aerial photography, GPS and GIS, microtopographic maps, and ground-truthing surveys to examine the role of interspecific competition in structuring wetland communities in the Marsh Ecology Research Program (MERP) experimental marshes at Delta Marsh, Manitoba, Canada. The MERP complex consists of ten sand-diked and two "control" marshes, each between ca. 5-7 ha in area. Water level fluctuations in Delta Marsh were artificially stabilized in 1961, disrupting the natural flood-drought cycle. Since 1989, water levels in the twelve marshes have been left to equilibrate with the surrounding marsh. At present, six emergent plant zones characterize the twelve marshes: salt-tolerant species, annuals, reed grass, whitetop, cattail and bulrush. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) 2007-07-12T17:50:49Z 2007-07-12T17:50:49Z 2001-05-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2610 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The objective of this study is to examine the long-term vegetation dynamics of a prairie marsh following water level stabilization. We hypothesize that disruption of the natural disturbance regime (flood-drought cycles) in prairie marshes increases the influence of competition among macrophyte species. An increase in competitive interactions results in elimination of subordinate species, while consolidating the abundance of competitive dominants. We used colour infrared aerial photography, GPS and GIS, microtopographic maps, and ground-truthing surveys to examine the role of interspecific competition in structuring wetland communities in the Marsh Ecology Research Program (MERP) experimental marshes at Delta Marsh, Manitoba, Canada. The MERP complex consists of ten sand-diked and two "control" marshes, each between ca. 5-7 ha in area. Water level fluctuations in Delta Marsh were artificially stabilized in 1961, disrupting the natural flood-drought cycle. Since 1989, water levels in the twelve marshes have been left to equilibrate with the surrounding marsh. At present, six emergent plant zones characterize the twelve marshes: salt-tolerant species, annuals, reed grass, whitetop, cattail and bulrush. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
author Grosshans, Richard E.
spellingShingle Grosshans, Richard E.
Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
author_facet Grosshans, Richard E.
author_sort Grosshans, Richard E.
title Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
title_short Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
title_full Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
title_fullStr Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
title_full_unstemmed Long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
title_sort long-term vegetation dynamics following water level stabilization in a prairie marsh
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2610
work_keys_str_mv AT grosshansricharde longtermvegetationdynamicsfollowingwaterlevelstabilizationinaprairiemarsh
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