Journal article

Recovery pathways from small-scale disturbance in a temperate Australian seagrass

TM Smith, PH York, PI Macreadie, MJ Keough, D Jeff Ross, CDH Sherman

Marine Ecology Progress Series | Published : 2016

Abstract

Recovery from disturbance is a key element of ecosystem persistence, and recovery can be influenced by large-scale regional differences and smaller local-scale variations in environmental conditions. Seagrass beds are an important yet threatened nearshore habitat and recover from disturbance by regrowth, vegetative extension and dispersive propagules. We described recovery pathways from small-scale disturbances in the seagrass Zostera nigricaulis in Port Phillip Bay, a large embayment in southeastern Australia, and tested whether these pathways differed between 5 regions with different hydrodynamic conditions and water quality, and between sites within those regions. Recovery pathways were b..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council



Funding Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (Australia). P.I.M. was supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award DE130101084. Additional support came from Discovery Award DP1093230 to M.J.K. All work was performed at the Victorian Marine Science Consortium. Assistance in the field and laboratory was provided by E. Cumming, R. Watson, D. Lees, A. Wayman and P. Ho.