4.0 Article

Annual Summer Submersed Macrophyte Standing Stocks Estimated From Long-Term Monitoring Data in the Upper Mississippi River

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 205-222

Publisher

U S FISH & WILDLIFE SERVICE
DOI: 10.3996/JFWM-21-063

Keywords

submersed aquatic vegetation; SAV; biomass; aboveground standing stocks; Vallisneria americana; Upper Mississippi River Restoration

Funding

  1. Upper Mississippi River Restoration Long Term Resource Monitoring Element
  2. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  3. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
  4. U.S. Geological Survey Land Management Research Program

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This study summarizes the system-scale restoration efforts within the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge. By developing predictive models and estimating biomass, the researchers were able to analyze the composition and changes of submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) in different river reaches, and discovered previously unnoticed changes.
System-scale restoration efforts within the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge have included annual monitoring of submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) since 1998 in four representative reaches spanning similar to 440 river kilometers. We developed predictive models relating monitoring data (site-scale SAV abundance indices) to diver-harvested SAV biomass, used the models to back-estimate annual standing stock biomass between 1998 and 2018, and compared biomass estimates with previous abundance measures. We modeled two morphologically distinct groups of SAV with differing sampling efficiencies and estimated each separately: the first category included only wild celery Vallisneria americana, which has long, unbranched leaves and dominates lotic environments, while the second category included 17 branched morphology species (e.g., hornwort Ceratophyllum demersum and Canadian water weed Elodea canadensis) and dominates lentic environments. Wild celery accounted for approximately half of total estimated total biomass in the four reaches, combined branched species accounted for half, and invasive species (Eurasian watermilfoil Myriophyllum spicatum and curly-leaf pondweed Potamogeton crispus), a fraction of the branched species, accounted for < 1.5%. Site-scale SAV estimates ranged from 0 to 535 g.m(-2) (dry mass). We observed increases in biomass in most areas between 1998 and 2009 and substantial increases (e.g., from < 10 g.m(-2) to similar to 125 g.m(-2)) in wild celery in extensive impounded areas between 2002 and 2007. Analyses also indicate a transitional period in 2007-2010 during which changes in biomass trajectories were evident in all reaches and included the start of a 9-y, similar to 70% decrease in wild celery biomass in the southernmost impounded area. Biomass estimates provided new insights and illustrated scales of change that were not previously apparent using traditional metrics. The ability to estimate biomass from Long Term Resource Monitoring data improves conservation efforts through better understanding of changes in habitat and food resources for biota, improved goal setting for restoration projects and improved quantification of SAV-mediated structural effects such as anchoring of sediments and feedbacks with water quality.

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