4.7 Article

Threshold effects of flood duration on the vegetation and soils of the Upper Mississippi River floodplain, USA

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 270, Issue -, Pages 135-146

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2012.01.023

Keywords

Acer saccharinum; Diversity; Flood inundation; Principal Components Analysis; Soil fertility; Soil texture

Categories

Funding

  1. USACE
  2. USEPA
  3. USFWS
  4. USGS

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Most large rivers have experienced major changes in hydrology and land use over the past century, with concomitant effects on sedimentation, nutrient cycling and biodiversity. To restore and/or enhance these ecosystems, managers need to know where their efforts are most likely to succeed under current hydrologic regimes as well as under potential future hydrologic regimes. We therefore examined changes in forest vegetation and soils across a hydrologic gradient, expressed as flood duration during the growing season, for 320 km of the Upper Mississippi River (UMR) floodplain. Soil texture was highly variable but trended toward finer grained sediments and >5% organic matter as flood duration increased from 0% to similar to 40% of the growing season. Beyond 40%, soil texture was exclusively silt plus clay with >5% organic matter. The diversity of both the understory and overstory tree communities was also highly variable at sites that flooded for <40% of the growing season. However, understory diversity decreased as flood duration increased from 0% to similar to 25% of the growing season and overstory diversity declined as flood duration increased from 0% to similar to 40% of the growing season. Diversity estimates for both strata were uniformly low at sites that flooded for longer than similar to 40% of the growing season. Beyond this point the proportional abundance of Acer saccharinum in the overstory exceeded 70%. Our results suggest that there is a threshold along the elevation gradient of this floodplain, corresponding with flood durations lasting similar to 40% of the growing season. At lower elevation sites, flooding exerts primary control over forest soils and vegetation, restricting the former to silt plus clay with higher organic matter and the latter to a few highly flood tolerant species. The existence of such thresholds have implications for management of floodplain soil nutrient dynamics and plant diversity under existing hydrologic regimes, more natural hydrologic regimes and more extreme hydrologic regimes that may result from climate change. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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