4.7 Article

Variable Effects on Benthic Community From Diking to Eradicate Invasive Plants in the Yangtze Estuary Salt Marsh

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.706353

Keywords

community structure; diking project; ecological restoration; macrobenthic invertebrate; eradicate invasive plant; Spartina

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD0900905, 2019YFD0901202]
  2. Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund, ECSFR, CAFS [2021M04]
  3. Specific Financial Fund of Ministry of Agriculture, China Investigation of Fishery Resources and Environment in the Yangtze River [CJDC-2017-23]

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The study investigated the impact of using dikes for ecological restoration projects in the estuarine salt marsh of the Yangtze River, finding that fully and partially diked areas had different effects on macrobenthos diversity. Preserving tidewater canals can mitigate the negative effects of diking on macrobenthos, while providing an effective approach for biodiversity conservation.
The removal of invasive plants is a global concern, and ecological restoration methods have been a major research topic in recent years. In the estuarine salt marsh of the Yangtze River, dikes are typically used in ecological restoration projects to eradicate the invasive plant Spartina alterniflora. We explored ways of optimizing dike construction and of providing an effective basis for the wetland ecological control and protection of biodiversity and analyzed the effects on the macrobenthos of fully and partially dikes. The measurement of the quantitative change in macrobenthos diversity and species composition was carried out in the project area and in a control before (2013) and after (2016) dike construction. Results showed that the number of species and average density decreased significantly in the fully diked enclosed area but increased in the partially diked semi-enclosed area. Outside the project area, all site samples showed increased species richness and average density after dike construction. This study indicated that macrobenthos was negatively affected by the dike project in the inside diked area. However, when the tidewater canals were preserved to maintain the connection between the inside and outside areas, there was a positive effect on macrobenthos in the project area. We suggest that canals are preserved while diking in the salt marsh and that gates are opened regularly to maintain the water and nutrient connectedness inside and outside the dike. The diking project mostly affected mollusks and polychaetes, which are the indispensable food sources for birds and fish. The study provides valid evidence for the management of estuarine salt marsh and the protection of macrobenthos.

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