Abstract

Water depth and flow effects on growth and nutrient content of three marsh plants (Cladium jamaicense Crantz, Eleocharis cellulosa Torr., and Nymphaea odorata Aiton) and on soil-building were estimated in the Loxahatchee Impoundment Landscape Assessment where macrocosms contain habitats distinguished by relative water depth (deep slough, shallow slough, and mid-ridge) but that differ in flow. We hypothesized that optimal growth would vary with water depth and species, paralleling distributions in the natural environment, and that growth and tissue nutrients would be positively affected by flow. In addition, we hypothesized that plant morphology would influence sediment deposition with the dense growth of C. jamaicense supporting greatest accretion. Our hypotheses were partly supported. Cladium jamaicense unexpectedly grew best in deep sloughs at depths greater than previously reported. Eleocharis cellulosa had a wide depth tolerance and grew best in flowing conditions. Nymphaea odorata grew best in slough habitats. Nutrient contents differed among species and plant parts but were not affected by flow. Soil accretion did not vary with biomass but partially varied with depth and flow, both key factors in conceptual models of vegetation and soil dynamics in wetlands, especially in the Everglades ridge-and-slough topography.

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