Abstract

The seed banks of six Lake Ontario shoreline marshes were investigated to assess the potential for natural regeneration of sparse submerged macrophyte populations in marshes subjected to anthropogenic disturbance. Twenty-six core samples were taken in each of three disturbed marshes with sparse submerged vegetation, and the number of seeds was compared with samples from three reference marshes containing abundant submerged vegetation. Six cores from each of six marshes were examined to determine whether there was a difference between disturbed and reference marshes in seed density or seed distribution, and germination assays were used to assess differences in seed viability. Seeds of five submerged macrophyte taxa were identified in substrate samples of the six marshes. Mean seed density was significantly higher in the three reference marshes (4082 – 47 623 seeds/m2) than in the three disturbed marshes (0–2041 seeds/m2). The density of seedlings of submerged macrophytes germinating in reference marsh samples ranged from 333 to 2406 seedlings/m2, whereas no seedlings germinated from disturbed marsh samples. The deeper sediments (7–14 cm sediment depth) in the reference marshes had comparable seed densities to those in the shallower sediments, whereas seeds were found in only the deeper sediments of the disturbed marshes. These data suggest that regeneration from buried seeds is unlikely in the disturbed marshes, even if improvements occur in the environmental conditions that have historically inhibited the growth of submerged macrophytes. Key words: submerged macrophytes, anthropogenic disturbance, Lake Ontario, seed banks, natural regeneration.

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