Journal article
Seasonal timing of inundation affects riparian plant growth and flowering: Implications for riparian vegetation composition
J Greet, RD Cousens, JA Webb
Plant Ecology | Published : 2013
Abstract
Changes to the timing of peak river flows caused by flow regulation affect riparian vegetation composition, but the mechanisms driving such vegetation changes are not well understood. We investigated experimentally the effects of timing of inundation on riparian plant growth and flowering. We collected 168 sods from 14 sites across five lowland rivers in south-eastern Australia. Plant cover and flowering within the sods were surveyed each season for a year. During this period, sods were inundated for 6 weeks in either early spring or in summer. Terrestrial plant taxa (which included most exotic species) senesced in response to inundation, regardless of its timing. In contrast, native amphibi..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank William Bovill for his help with sod collection, Nick Osbourne and Sascha Andrusiak for their kind help and nursery expertise and Ashley MacQueen, William Bovill and two anonymous reviewers for their considered comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. Joe Greet was supported by a Melbourne Research Scholarship and an eWater top-up scholarship.