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1.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 17636, 2022 10 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36271232

RESUMO

"Blue carbon" wetland vegetation has a limited freshwater requirement. One type, mangroves, utilizes less freshwater during transpiration than adjacent terrestrial ecoregions, equating to only 43% (average) to 57% (potential) of evapotranspiration ([Formula: see text]). Here, we demonstrate that comparative consumptive water use by mangrove vegetation is as much as 2905 kL H2O ha-1 year-1 less than adjacent ecoregions with [Formula: see text]-to-[Formula: see text] ratios of 47-70%. Lower porewater salinity would, however, increase mangrove [Formula: see text]-to-[Formula: see text] ratios by affecting leaf-, tree-, and stand-level eco-physiological controls on transpiration. Restricted water use is also additive to other ecosystem services provided by mangroves, such as high carbon sequestration, coastal protection and support of biodiversity within estuarine and marine environments. Low freshwater demand enables mangroves to sustain ecological values of connected estuarine ecosystems with future reductions in freshwater while not competing with the freshwater needs of humans. Conservative water use may also be a characteristic of other emergent blue carbon wetlands.


Assuntos
Carbono , Ecossistema , Humanos , Sequestro de Carbono , Áreas Alagadas , Água Doce , Água
2.
Ann Bot ; 2022 Jun 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35802787

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Trees interconnected through functional root grafts can exchange resources, but the effect of exchange on trees remains under debate. A mechanistic understanding of resource exchange via functional root grafts will help understand their ecological implications for tree water exchange for individual trees, groups of trees and forest stands. METHODS: To identify the main patterns qualitatively describing the movement of sap between grafted trees, we reviewed the available literature on root grafting in woody plants that focus on tree allometry and resource translocation via root grafts. We then extended the BETTINA model, which simulates mangrove (Avicennia germinans) tree growth on the individual tree scale, to synthesize the available empirical information. Using allometric data from a field study in mangrove stands, we simulated potential water exchange and analysed movement patterns between grafted trees. KEY RESULTS: In the simulations, relative water exchange ranged between -9.17 and 20.3 %, and was driven by gradients of water potential, i.e. differences in tree size and water availability. Moreover, the exchange of water through root grafts alters the water balance of trees and their feedback with the soil: grafted trees that receive water from their neighbours reduce their water uptake. CONCLUSIONS: Our individual-tree modelling study is a first theoretical attempt to quantify root graft-mediated water exchange between trees. Our findings indicate that functional root grafts represent a vector of hydraulic redistribution, helping to maintain the water balance of grafted trees. This non-invasive approach can serve as a basis for designing empirical studies to better understand the role of grafted root interaction networks on a broader scale.

3.
Ann Bot ; 2022 Jun 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35686514

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Trees interconnected through functional root grafts can exchange resources, but the effect of exchange on trees remains under debate. A mechanistic understanding of resources exchange via functional root grafts will help understand their ecological implications for tree water exchange for individual trees, groups of trees, and forest stands. METHODS: To identify the main patterns qualitatively describing the movement of sap between grafted trees, we reviewed available literature on root grafting in woody plants that focus on tree allometry and resource translocation via root grafts. We then extended the BETTINA model, which simulates mangrove (Avicennia germinans) tree growth on the individual tree scale, in order to synthesize the available empirical information. Using allometric data from a field study in mangrove stands, we simulated potential water exchange and analyzed movement patterns between grafted trees. KEY RESULTS: In the simulations, relative water exchange ranged between -9.17 and 20.3 %, and was driven by gradients of water potential, i.e. differences in tree size and water availability. Moreover, the exchange of water through root grafts alters the water balance of trees and their feedback with the soil: grafted trees that receive water from their neighbors reduce their water uptake. CONCLUSIONS: Our individual-tree modelling study is a first theoretical attempt to quantify root graft-mediated water exchange between trees. Our findings indicate that functional root grafts represent a vector of hydraulic redistribution, helping to maintain the water balance of grafted trees. This non-invasive approach can serve as a fundament for designing empirical studies to better understand the role of grafted root interaction networks on a broader scale.

4.
J Environ Manage ; 318: 115507, 2022 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35738125

RESUMO

The United Nations Decade on Ecosystem restoration (2021¬-2030) lists mangrove ecosystems as a restoration priority. Interest in their conservation has increased recently due to their widespread degradation. Anthropogenic stressors and rehabilitation practices, specifically, have resulted in a significant decline in their species compositions. We investigated the knowledge gaps in terms of potential spatial diversity, intertidal zonation, and the historic state of mangrove forest species, and tested the role of environmental factors such as topography, as well as rehabilitation practices on diversity. Diversity and complexity indices, surface elevation, and species and structural diversities along three simplified transect lines over a broad geographical area and under various management practices were analyzed in Trat province, Thailand. Quantitative statistical zonation analyses within each transect and at the landscape-scale were performed using randomization tests and hierarchical cluster analysis. A modified "automatic regrowth monitoring algorithm (ARMA)," based on Landsat (1987-2020) and Sentinel-2 MSI (2015-2020) annual median composites was also used. Fifteen species were identified, with Ceriops tagal as the dominant species. Statistical analysis, however, failed to identify any significant zonation patterns at transect or landscape-scales at specific elevations. Rehabilitated and naturally regenerated stands showed gradual increases in their Normalized Difference Infrared Index over time. After 30 years, the rehabilitated stands made up of Rhizophoraceae monocultures were the same height as the adjacent natural stands. Depending on the location and propagule availability, the diversity and structure of regenerated stands exhibited high variation. Effluent from shrimp farms may have contributed to the disturbance of the forest stands and changes in shrimp farming practices could have facilitated their recovery. The results of the present study provide a valuable diversity baseline for the study site and secondary succession in rehabilitated and regenerated mangroves. The ARMA algorithm has also been confirmed as a valuable tool for future investigations of secondary succession and mangrove biodiversity status.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Rhizophoraceae , Biodiversidade , Florestas , Áreas Alagadas
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