4.4 Article

Effects of Native Plant Species, Mycorrhizal Inoculum, and Mulch on Restoration of Reservoir Sediment Following Dam Removal, Elwha River, Olympic Peninsula, Washington

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 251-260

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2009.00559.x

Keywords

arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; dam removal; inoculum; native plant species; reservoir sediment; restoration

Categories

Funding

  1. North Coast and Cascades Research Learning Network
  2. UC Davis

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As dams across the country continue to age, successful restoration of dewatered reservoirs remains a critical factor in decisions regarding dam removal. Freshly exposed reservoir sediment may not support rapid reestablishment of native plant species due to poor fertility or absence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi propagules. This field study evaluated treatment effects involving combinations of native plants, mycorrhizal inoculum, and mulch on restoration of dewatered reservoir sediment over 20 months. Most plants, even those uninoculated, became mycorrhizal. In all treatments, sediment pH decreased, as did nitrogen and organic matter, compared to original reservoir sediment, while aggregate stability doubled from original anaerobic sediment. Revegetated plots with mulch had significantly greater vegetation cover and more native volunteer species compared to plots without mulch. The planted mulch treatment also decreased plot runoff tenfold, reducing erosion to the same degree. Indicators suggest that the primary benefit of mulch resulted in increased moisture retention making the planted mulch treatment most successful for restoration of reservoir sediment due to extensive native plant growth, improved soil characteristics, and reduced runoff and erosion compared to nonmulched plots. While results from this plot-scale study suggest commercial mycorrhizal inoculum is unnecessary since natural inoculum sources sufficiently colonized plants, reservoir-scale restoration may require creation of additional source areas to encourage rapid reestablishment of native plants and mycorrhizal fungi.

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