Abstract

Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) communities display complex patch dynamics at seascape scales that are presently poorly understood as most studies of disturbance on SAV habitats have focused on changes in biomass at small, quadrat-level scales. In this study, analyses of remote sensing imagery and population modelling were applied to understand SAV patch dynamics and forecast the fate of these important communities in Biscayne Bay, Miami, Florida, US. We evaluated how the proximity of freshwater canals influences seagrass-dominated SAV patch dynamics and, in turn, how patch-size structure influences the stability of seagrass seascapes under different salinity scenarios. Seagrass fragmentation rates were higher in sites adjacent to freshwater canals compared to sites distant from the influences of freshwater deliveries. Furthermore, we documented a clear trend in patch mortality rates with respect to patch size, with the smallest patches (50 m2) undergoing 57% annual mortality on average. The combination of higher fragmentation rates and the higher mortality of smaller seagrass patches in habitats exposed to pulses of low salinity raises concern for the long-term persistence of seagrass meadows in nearshore urban habitats of Biscayne Bay that are presently targets of Everglades restoration. Our model scenarios that simulated high fragmentation rates resulted in SAV population collapses, regardless of SAV recruitment rates. The combined remote sensing and population modelling approach used here provides evaluation and predictive tools that can be used by managers to track seagrass status and stress-response at seascape levels not available previously for the seagrasses of South Florida.

Highlights

  • Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) assemblages composed of seagrasses and macroalgae create productive ecosystems in shallow coastal environments around the world [1, 2]

  • Resilience of seagrass communities exposed to pulsed freshwater discharges manatees, seagrass meadows provide increasingly valuable ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, coastal sedimentation stabilization, and improvement of water clarity [5, 6]

  • We hypothesized that the rates of Resilience of seagrass communities exposed to pulsed freshwater discharges fragmentation and the long-term dynamics of patch-size structure, would be influenced by the discharge of fresh water from canals, with areas closer to canals having seascapes with higher fragmentation rates and patch-size structures dominated by smaller patches that can compromise the long-term persistence of SAV/seagrass habitats

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Summary

Introduction

Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) assemblages composed of seagrasses and macroalgae create productive ecosystems in shallow coastal environments around the world [1, 2]. These ecosystems provide a wide range of essential ecological and economic services valued at US $3.8 trillion per year [3, 4]. Seagrasses provide the essential nursery habitat for fisheries species such as snappers, groupers, shrimp, and queen conch [8, 9]

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