Abstract

The diversity of plant species and their distribution in space are both thought to have important effects on the function of wetland ecosystems. However, knowledge of the relationships between plant species and spatial diversity remains incomplete. In this study, we investigated relationships between spatial pattern and plant species diversity over a five year period following the initial restoration of experimental wetland ecosystems. In 2003, six identical and hydrologically-isolated 0.18 ha wetland “cells” were constructed in former farmland in northeast Ohio. The systems were subjected to planting treatments that resulted in different levels of vascular plant species diversity among cells. Plant species diversity was assessed through annual inventories. Plant spatial pattern was assessed by digitizing low-altitude aerial photographs taken at the same time as the inventories. Diversity metrics derived from the inventories were significantly related to certain spatial metrics derived from the photographs, including cover type diversity and contagion. We found that wetlands with high cover type diversity harbor higher plant species diversity than wetlands with fewer types of patches. We also found significant relationships between plant species diversity and spatial patterning of patch types, but the direction of the effect differed depending on the diversity metric used. Links between diversity and spatial pattern observed in this study suggest that high-resolution aerial imagery may provide wetland scientists with a useful tool for assessing plant diversity.

Highlights

  • Plant species diversity is valued, in part, for its potential effects on ecosystem functions, such as primary productivity and nutrient cycling (e.g., [1,2,3])

  • We found that on-the-ground measures of plant species diversity significantly affected some spatial metrics but not others

  • We investigated relationships between plant spatial pattern and plant species diversity over a five year period in experimental wetland systems that had been intentionally managed to produce different levels of plant species diversity

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Summary

Introduction

Plant species diversity is valued, in part, for its potential effects on ecosystem functions, such as primary productivity and nutrient cycling (e.g., [1,2,3]). The spatial patterning of environmental characteristics, such as plant cover type, is thought to have important. Spatial Metrics versus Plant Diversity in Constructed Wetlands

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