Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)

The delta of the Paraná River in Argentina forms islands as it progrades into the Rio de la Plata estuary. In order to understand plant succession patterns, we analyzed cover-abundance and soil data along transects across topographic gradients of three islands. Using multivariate classification (TWI...

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Autores principales: Kandus, P., Malvárez, A.I.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02775212_v24_n3_p620_Kandus
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spelling todo:paper_02775212_v24_n3_p620_Kandus2023-10-03T15:16:05Z Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina) Kandus, P. Malvárez, A.I. Delta Primary succession Tidal freshwater wetland Vegetation pattern delta island ordination succession vegetation classification vegetation dynamics wetland Parana River South America Western Hemisphere World Erythrina crista-galli Populus Salicaceae Salix Schoenoplectus californicus Scirpus Scirpus californicus The delta of the Paraná River in Argentina forms islands as it progrades into the Rio de la Plata estuary. In order to understand plant succession patterns, we analyzed cover-abundance and soil data along transects across topographic gradients of three islands. Using multivariate classification (TWINSPAN) and ordination (DCA and CCA), we developed a conceptual model of plant succession for these islands. The general pattern is that the bulrush, Schoenoplectus californicus, first colonizes bars and incipient islands that eventually accumulate sediments to become mature islands with levees dominated by the tree, Erythrina crista-galli, and interior emergent marshes at lower elevations also dominated by a bulrush, Scirpus giganteits. In contrast to earlier descriptions of a unique pathway of primary succession, we used elevation gradients, sediment composition, and inferred hydrologic regime to differentiate two major pathways of species colonization and persistence. During levee formation, colonization of high-energy environments by the bulrush leads to replacement by a mixture of forbs, and finally by a E. crista-galli forest. It is possible that further enrichment of the forest with other tree species is now obscured by Salicaceae plantations (Salix spp. and Populus spp.). Levee formation isolates the interior of islands hydrologically. There, nearly permanent flooding and lack of flushing allow dominance by S. giganteits. The persistence of this species is evidenced by its recovery after fire and its reestablishment after Salicaceae plantations are abandoned. It is noteworthy that two bulrush, S. californicus and S. giganteus, form the simplest stands in terms of richness and structure at highest and lowest energy environments, respectively. At any given site, species composition appears to respond to changes in topographic position, hydrologic regime, and sediment composition. © 2004, The Society of Wetland Scientists. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02775212_v24_n3_p620_Kandus
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Delta
Primary succession
Tidal freshwater wetland
Vegetation pattern
delta
island
ordination
succession
vegetation classification
vegetation dynamics
wetland
Parana River
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
Erythrina crista-galli
Populus
Salicaceae
Salix
Schoenoplectus californicus
Scirpus
Scirpus californicus
spellingShingle Delta
Primary succession
Tidal freshwater wetland
Vegetation pattern
delta
island
ordination
succession
vegetation classification
vegetation dynamics
wetland
Parana River
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
Erythrina crista-galli
Populus
Salicaceae
Salix
Schoenoplectus californicus
Scirpus
Scirpus californicus
Kandus, P.
Malvárez, A.I.
Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
topic_facet Delta
Primary succession
Tidal freshwater wetland
Vegetation pattern
delta
island
ordination
succession
vegetation classification
vegetation dynamics
wetland
Parana River
South America
Western Hemisphere
World
Erythrina crista-galli
Populus
Salicaceae
Salix
Schoenoplectus californicus
Scirpus
Scirpus californicus
description The delta of the Paraná River in Argentina forms islands as it progrades into the Rio de la Plata estuary. In order to understand plant succession patterns, we analyzed cover-abundance and soil data along transects across topographic gradients of three islands. Using multivariate classification (TWINSPAN) and ordination (DCA and CCA), we developed a conceptual model of plant succession for these islands. The general pattern is that the bulrush, Schoenoplectus californicus, first colonizes bars and incipient islands that eventually accumulate sediments to become mature islands with levees dominated by the tree, Erythrina crista-galli, and interior emergent marshes at lower elevations also dominated by a bulrush, Scirpus giganteits. In contrast to earlier descriptions of a unique pathway of primary succession, we used elevation gradients, sediment composition, and inferred hydrologic regime to differentiate two major pathways of species colonization and persistence. During levee formation, colonization of high-energy environments by the bulrush leads to replacement by a mixture of forbs, and finally by a E. crista-galli forest. It is possible that further enrichment of the forest with other tree species is now obscured by Salicaceae plantations (Salix spp. and Populus spp.). Levee formation isolates the interior of islands hydrologically. There, nearly permanent flooding and lack of flushing allow dominance by S. giganteits. The persistence of this species is evidenced by its recovery after fire and its reestablishment after Salicaceae plantations are abandoned. It is noteworthy that two bulrush, S. californicus and S. giganteus, form the simplest stands in terms of richness and structure at highest and lowest energy environments, respectively. At any given site, species composition appears to respond to changes in topographic position, hydrologic regime, and sediment composition. © 2004, The Society of Wetland Scientists.
format JOUR
author Kandus, P.
Malvárez, A.I.
author_facet Kandus, P.
Malvárez, A.I.
author_sort Kandus, P.
title Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
title_short Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
title_full Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
title_fullStr Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
title_full_unstemmed Vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta Islands of the parana river (Argentina)
title_sort vegetation patterns and change analysis in the lower delta islands of the parana river (argentina)
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02775212_v24_n3_p620_Kandus
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AT malvarezai vegetationpatternsandchangeanalysisinthelowerdeltaislandsoftheparanariverargentina
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