Abstract

Riparian zones support some of the most dynamic and species-rich plant communities in cold regions. A common conception among plant ecologists is that flooding during the season when plants are dormant generally has little effect on the survival and production of riparian vegetation. We show that winter floods may also be of fundamental importance for the composition of riverine vegetation. We investigated the effects of ice formation on riparian and in-stream vegetation in northern Sweden using a combination of experiments and observations in 25 reaches, spanning a gradient from ice-free to ice-rich reaches. The ice-rich reaches were characterized by high production of frazil and anchor ice. In a couple of experiments, we exposed riparian vegetation to experimentally induced winter flooding, which reduced the dominant dwarf-shrub cover and led to colonization of a species-rich forb-dominated vegetation. In another experiment, natural winter floods caused by anchor-ice formation removed plant mimics both in the in-stream and in the riparian zone, further supporting the result that anchor ice maintains dynamic plant communities. With a warmer winter climate, ice-induced winter floods may first increase in frequency because of more frequent shifts between freezing and thawing during winter, but further warming and shortening of the winter might make them less common than today. If ice-induced winter floods become reduced in number because of a warming climate, an important disturbance agent for riparian and in-stream vegetation will be removed, leading to reduced species richness in streams and rivers in cold regions. Given that such regions are expected to have more plant species in the future because of immigration from the south, the distribution of species richness among habitats can be expected to show novel patterns.

Highlights

  • Riparian zones are dynamic, diverse, and fundamentally important landscape components in most parts of the world (Gregory et al 1991; Naiman and Decamps 1997; Morris et al 2002)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • An inventory of the streams showed that these differences played a role in terms of plant community composition

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Summary

Introduction

Diverse, and fundamentally important landscape components in most parts of the world (Gregory et al 1991; Naiman and Decamps 1997; Morris et al 2002). Their dynamics are usually seen as a result of the flow regime during the ice-free period, in cold regions characterized by spring floods, summer low flows, and floods triggered by rainstorms in the autumn. Flooding affects plant growth directly by reducing respiration and photosynthesis during inundation (Van Eck et al 2006), and indirectly by determining soil texture through erosion and sedimentation (Henry et al 1996). As an interface between aquatic and terrestrial environments, riparian zones are exposed to ice action (Lind et al 2014)

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