4.4 Article

Spatial variation and drivers of vegetation structure and composition in coastal freshwater wetlands of subtropical Australia

Journal

MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH
Volume 72, Issue 12, Pages 1746-1759

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/MF21023

Keywords

climate change; floodplain wetlands; salinity; sea level rise; tidal freshwater wetlands

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Coastal freshwater wetlands in southeast Queensland, Australia are understudied and vulnerable to climate changes. The study found that vegetation patterns were associated with gradients of rainfall, soil moisture, salinity, and pH. Species composition in the understorey was related to wetland species, native grasses and herbs, and canopy vegetation. Common species like Melaleuca quinquenervia and Eucalyptus tereticornis dominated tree variation.
Coastal freshwater wetlands (CFWs) are among the most understudied wetlands globally and are highly vulnerable to projected climate changes. To address CFW knowledge gaps in south-east Queensland, Australia, we surveyed the floristic composition and structure of wooded CFWs and explored variation in vegetation patterns in relation to selected environmental drivers. Understorey and shrub assemblages were surveyed using a cover-class scale and stem counts for tree species abundance. Vegetation structure attributes (stem density, basal area) were calculated from survey data. Redundancy analysis was used to investigate drivers of vegetation structure and the species composition of each stratum. Vegetation structure patterns were associated with gradients of rainfall, soil moisture, salinity and pH. Understorey species composition was associated with wallum wetland species, native perennial grass and herb species, and vegetation patterns of the canopy. Common CFW species, namely Melaleuca quinquenervia and Eucalyptus tereticornis, dominated tree assemblage variation. Overall, CFW vegetation exhibited strong associations with gradients of salinity, rainfall, groundwater dependence and disturbance. Alterations to key drivers of vegetation pattern with future climate changes are likely to markedly influence the composition, structure and function of CFW vegetation communities. Action is therefore required to maintain CFW vegetation communities and ecological function in these diverse and unique wetland systems.

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