4.7 Article

Current Status and Potential Invasiveness Evaluation of an Exotic Mangrove Species, Laguncularia racemosa (L.) CF Gaertn, on Hainan Island, China

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f14102036

Keywords

mangrove forest; natural dispersion; biodiversity; invasive species

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The study investigated the distribution, community structure, and population characteristics of the mangrove species Laguncularia racemosa on Hainan Island, China, to determine its potential invasiveness. The results showed that L. racemosa is an important species in the region and has a high capacity for natural dispersion. It exhibits dominance in the artificial community and may exclude other mangrove species. The study provides fundamental data for the prevention, control, and management of L. racemosa in Hainan Island and other mangrove wetlands in China.
Laguncularia racemosa is widely planted in coastal mudflats as a pioneer species of mangrove afforestation in China; however, whether it exhibits invasiveness as an exotic species has been a topic of debate. In this study, we investigated the distribution, community structure, and population characteristics of L. racemosa on Hainan Island, China, to discuss its potential invasiveness. The results showed that Hainan Island has become an important distribution area for L. racemosa in China, covering a total area of 64.90 ha. In this investigation, a total of 11 true mangrove species, belonging to six families and 11 genera, were discovered in the L. racemosa community throughout Hainan Island. Furthermore, L. racemosa exhibited a strong adaptive range to seawater salinity and demonstrated a high capacity for natural dispersion. L. racemosa exhibited high importance values in the tree, shrub, and seedling layers of this artificial community, indicating its dominance and potential exclusion of other mangrove species. Over time, the importance values of L. racemosa in the tree and shrub layers initially decreased and then increased, while the opposite trend was observed in the seedling layer. Overall, the diversity indexes, including the Simpson index, Shannon-Wiener index, and Pielou community evenness index, were low in the planted L. racemosa forest on Hainan Island, suggesting a relatively simple species composition within the L. racemosa community. Additionally, based on the height levels of the L. racemosa population, we found that it mainly belonged to the first level, characterized by a large number of seedlings on Hainan Island. The number of L. racemosa seedlings gradually decreased in subsequent levels, and higher height levels of L. racemosa appeared with longer planting times, indicating a growing trend of potential invasiveness of L. racemosa on Hainan Island over an extended period. We suggest that the government should be able to list L. racemosa as an invasive species that can be harvested in the future. Based on this, this study provides fundamental data and theoretical references for the sustainable prevention, control, and management of the exotic species L. racemosa on Hainan Island, and also in other mangrove wetlands in China.

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