4.6 Article

Biomass allocation of tidal freshwater marsh species in response to natural and manipulated hydroperiod in coastal deltaic floodplains

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 268, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2022.107784

Keywords

Coastal deltaic floodplains; Wax Lake delta; Net primary production; Biomass allocation; Sediment accretion; Carbon sequestration; Colocasia esculenta

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation via Coastal SEES program at LSU [EAR-1427389]
  2. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory as part of Delta X Mission
  3. ACTIONS project with U.S. Army Engineering, Research and Development Center
  4. Louisiana Sea Grant Program

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The study reveals that Colocasia esculenta, a species of tidal freshwater marsh, is able to cope with longer hydroperiods caused by river sediment diversions, and even increase its biomass. This is in contrast to previous studies conducted in brackish and saline settings where longer hydroperiods had negative effects on biomass accumulation.
Deltaic floodplains are highly vulnerable to relative sea level rise (RSLR) depending on the sediment supply from river channels that provides elevation capital as adaptation mechanism. In river channels where levees have restricted sediment supply to coastal deltaic floodplains, river sediment diversions have been proposed as a restoration strategy to increase elevation allowing for marshes to establish and cope with RSLR. The response of coastal wetlands to surface elevation has been well-defined for estuarine marshes, but models for coastal deltaic floodplain marshes have not been resolved. Here we coupled field observations from biomass plots and a mesocosm experiment ('marsh organ') with remote sensing techniques to assess biomass allocation of tidal freshwater marsh species in response to gradients in hydroperiod in Wax Lake Delta (WLD), coastal Louisiana, U.S.A.. We found that, contrary to salt-tolerant species, Colocasia esculenta aboveground biomass (AGB) is strongly positively correlated with percent inundated time (R-2 = 0.79, P < 0.001), increasing from (mean +/- 1SE) 186 +/- 69 g/m(2) in the supratidal zone to 1422 +/- 148 g/m(2) beyond its natural occurrence range in the lower intertidal zone. Belowground biomass consistently exceeded AGB at 2363 +/- 294 g/m(2) on average across elevation treatments. We also found that C. esculenta expanded its surface coverage area by 31% in five years consistent with the growth and emergence of WLD's subaqueous platforms, reflecting this species ability to cope with higher inundation time. In contrast to earlier studies conducted in brackish and saline settings, where longer hydroperiods had negative effects on biomass accumulation, our data suggest that tidal freshwater marshes can cope with longer hydroperiods caused by river sediment diversions.

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