Abstract

Resistance to complete submergence was tested in three Rumex species that occur in the Dutch river forelands. The species differ in both habitat and life history characteristics. The annual or biennial R. maritimus and the biennial or short lived perennial R. palustris grow on frequently flooded mud flats of low elevation, while the perennial R. thyrsiflorus can be found on dykes and river dunes that are seldom flooded. The flooding characteristics of the habitats of the three species were determined. These data were used to design experiments to determine the survival and biomass development of the three species during submergence and the influence of plant size and light level on these parameters. It was shown in all three species that plants submerged during daytime were much more resistant to flooding than those submerged at night. This is most probably due to the generation of oxygen or carbohydrates by underwater photosynthesis. Mature plants of the three species showed higher survival after submergence than juvenile plants, which might be caused by higher carbohydrate levels in the taproots of mature plants. In addition, the three species clearly differed in survival and biomass development during submergence. Rumex thyrsiflorus, the species least subjected to flooding, is least tolerant to complete submergence. Rumex maritimus, which can avoid the floods by having a short life cycle, is less tolerant to submergence than R. palustris, which has to survive the floods as a vegetative plant. It was noted that some plants that survived the flooding period itself, still died in the following period of drained conditions, possibly due to post‐anoxic injury.

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