Abstract

Riparian forests are structured and maintained by their hydrology. Woody riparian plants typically adapt to the local flood regime to maximise their likelihood of survival and reproductive success. Understanding how extant trees form and reproduce in response to flood disturbance is crucial for predicting vegetation changes and informing restoration. Working in a temperate evergreen riparian forest, we aimed to determine whether disturbance-based responses of plants found in other ecosystems also typify woody plants in riparian forests where disturbances are often mild or chronic, non-lethal, annual events. Using plant surveys and 20-year modelled hydrological data, we examined whether (1) the morphology (main stem diameter, height, crown width, crown extent, stem leaning) and (2) reproduction type (sexual and asexual reproduction) and extent of three dominant woody species (Eucalyptus camphora, Leptospermum lanigerum and Melaleuca squarrosa) vary with flood regime (flood frequency and flood duration); and (3) whether different morphology is associated with different reproductive strategies. Increased flooding generally resulted in increased stem numbers and greater stem leaning—morphologies associated with asexual reproduction—of our study species. More frequent flooding also reduced plant size and sexual reproduction in E. camphora. Sexual reproduction in the studied species was more common in taller plants with single, more upright stems in good condition. Flexible morphology and plastic reproductive strategy may constitute an adaptation of trees to mild or chronic disturbance in floodplains. Our findings suggest that flood regime (i.e. variable frequency and duration of flooding events) is critical to the structural integrity and self-maintenance of species-diverse riparian forests.

Highlights

  • Riparian forests are structured and maintained by their hydrology

  • A remarkable feature of woody plants is their flexible morphology in response to their e­ nvironment[1]

  • By examining relationships between flood regime, morphology and reproductive strategy of three dominant riparian woody plants, we found support for all of our three hypothesis: flood frequency and duration influenced woody riparian plant morphology (H1) and reproduction (H2), and different morphology was associated with different reproductive strategies (H3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Riparian forests are structured and maintained by their hydrology. Woody riparian plants typically adapt to the local flood regime to maximise their likelihood of survival and reproductive success. The resulting negative consequences for the environment and society have motivated efforts to actively restore riparian ecosystems Inducing such recovery requires sound understanding of woody plant responses to flood regime. Whole-tree morphology has received comparatively little attention outside forestry, despite its significance for ecosystem structure and f­unction[17], and there is a particular lack of empirical evidence from evergreen temperate riparian species subjected to regular, slow and shallow flooding. Trees embody their individual life history in their form. The relationship between disturbance, morphology and reproductive strategy for woody plants in riparian forests remains unclear

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call