Abstract

Die-back and healthy stands ofPhragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. exSteud., in the U.K. and Hungary, were compared in terms of plant morphology and anatomy, sediment redox potential and sulphide levels and plant resistance to internal Poiseuille gas flow. In laboratory experiments rhizome cuttings were exposed to acetic acid or dissolved sulphide in unstirred solution cultures in order to determine whether the die-back symptoms found in the field could be induced by these phytotoxins. Most of the die-back symptoms, namely stunting of adventitious roots and laterals, bud death, callus blockages of the gas-pathways, and vascular blockages (both xylem and phloem), were produced by each of the phytotoxin treatments. These symptoms were largely absent from healthy field sites and from the experimental controls. In a greenhouse experiment, plants were grown in waterlogged sand or loam, with or without a sub-surface organic layer composed of chopped up rhizomes and roots mixed with the soil base. Especially during the first 70 days, redox levels were considerably lowered, and shoot numbers and shoot growth much reduced by the presence of the organic layers; the effects were most pronounced in the sand plus organic matter treatment. It is suggested that accumulated phytotoxins, e.g. orgnaic acids and/or sulphide, whether produced from the death and decay of the plant, or from excessive organic loading or as an indirect results of eutrophication, will perpetuate the die-back ofPhragmites and prevent the recovery of the plant in the short term.

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