Title of article :
Importance of water source in controlling leaf leaching losses in a dwarf red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle L.) wetland
Author/Authors :
Stephen E. Davis III، نويسنده , , Daniel L. Childers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The southern Everglades mangrove ecotone is characterized by extensive dwarf Rhizophora mangle L. shrub forests with a seasonally variable
water source (Everglades e NE Florida Bay) and residence times ranging from short to long. We conducted a leaf leaching experiment to
understand the influence that water source and its corresponding water quality have on (1) the early decay of R. mangle leaves and (2) the early
exchange of total organic carbon (TOC) and total phosphorus (TP) between leaves and the water column. Newly senesced leaves collected from
lower Taylor River (FL) were incubated in bottles containing water from one of three sources (Everglades, ambient mangrove, and Florida Bay)
that spanned a range of salinity from 0 to 32&, [TOC] from 710 to 1400 mM, and [TP] from 0.17 to 0.33 mM. We poisoned half the bottles in
order to quantify abiotic processes (i.e., leaching) and assumed that non-poisoned bottles represented both biotic (i.e., microbial) and abiotic
processes. We sacrificed bottles after 1,2, 5, 10, and 21 days of incubation and quantified changes in leaf mass and changes in water column
[TOC] and [TP]. We saw 10e20% loss of leaf mass after 24 hdindependent of water treatmentdthat leveled off by Day 21. After 3 weeks,
non-poisoned leaves lost more mass than poisoned leaves, and there was only an effect of salinity on mass loss in poisoned incubationsdwith
greatest leaching-associated losses in Everglades freshwater. Normalized concentrations of TOC in the water column increased by more than two
orders of magnitude after 21 days with no effect of salinity and no difference between poisoned and non-poisoned treatments. However, normalized
[TP] was lower in non-poisoned incubations as a result of immobilization by epiphytic microbes. This immobilization was greatest in
Everglades freshwater and reflects the high P demand in this ecosystem. Immobilization of leached P in mangrove water and Florida Bay water
was delayed by several days and may indicate an initial microbial limitation by labile C during the dry season.
Keywords :
organic carbon , Phosphorus , Limiting factor , salinity , Everglades , hydraulic residence time
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science