4.6 Article

Aboveground wetland vegetation growth responses to simulated sediment diversion inundation scenarios

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 190, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2023.106943

Keywords

Wetland restoration; Sediment diversion; Flood duration; Vegetation; Flooding stress

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Decreased wetland elevation resulting from disrupted sediment influxes is a major driver of wetland loss in Coastal Louisiana. River sediment diversions are restoration techniques that aim to counter this loss, but their impact on vegetation and soil needs to be understood. This research found that increasing inundation depth and duration did not negatively affect aboveground growth responses of Spartina alterniflora and Typha latifolia, but could reduce stem densities and aboveground biomass of Spartina patens.
Coastal Louisiana is experiencing extremely high rates of wetland loss, particularly within the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain. Although multiple stressors contribute to this loss, one major driver is decreased wetland elevation stemming from disconnection of recurrent sediment rich influxes of Mississippi River floodwater. The decrease in sediment delivery, in conjunction with natural subsidence processes, reduce marsh elevations and increase flooding stress on vegetation, leading to marsh collapse. River sediment diversions are large-scale restoration techniques intended to rehabilitate Louisiana's degraded coastal wetlands by mimicking historic crevasse splays, thereby stimulating land building and vegetation growth. However, such large-scale restoration techniques require an appropriate knowledge base of vegetation and soil biogeochemical responses to altered environmental conditions. In this research, monospecific sods of three foundational marsh species (Spartina patens, Spartina alterniflora, Typha latifolia) were exposed to inundation depth (20 and 40 cm), duration (8 and 16 weeks), and salinity (0 and 5 psu) treatments consistent with a range of anticipated sediment diversion scenarios in a mes-ocosm setting. Additionally, sods were monitored through week 20 after being removed from their experimental conditions. Both Spartina alterniflora and Typha latifolia displayed relatively consistent increases in stem densities over time across inundation depth-duration treatments, whereas Spartina patens displayed a sharp decline in stem densities at 40 cm flooding depths. Additionally, both Spartina alterniflora and Spartina patens had the least observed amount of total aboveground biomass at 40 cm flooding depths. Spartina patens sods displayed a sig-nificant loss in surface elevation with increased flooding stress through study week 20, whereas Typha latifolia demonstrated a significant gain in surface elevation. These results suggest that restoration projects increasing inundation within the limits of the depths employed herein and the anticipated duration of river diversion induced inundation are unlikely to negatively impact the aboveground growth responses of Spartina alterniflora and Typha latifolia, but could reduce stem densities and aboveground biomass of Spartina patens.

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