Which factors affect the distribution of tidal wetland plants? Will these gradients shift with climate change? |
In the
last post, I began to describe some of the work I conducted as an ecologist
with the EPA. Our initial investigation was a regional survey to quantify
plants, algae and environmental characteristics in wetlands scattered
throughout four estuaries along the Oregon
coast. After working through the algae, a second goal of the regional survey
was to relate vascular plant species abundance, composition and diversity to
the major environmental gradients present in these wetlands (link to the paper). Salinity and
elevation relative to tides (this determines when and how long plants are
flooded) were of particular interest. With future sea-level rise, both flooding
and salinity exposure are expected to increase.
It is
already well known that factors like elevation and salinity impact wetland
vegetation in a general sense (e.g., Watson and Byrne 2009), but the specific
relationships between plant communities and their local environment are less
well known in the Pacific Northwest . Additionally,
it is useful to know which environmental factors have the greatest effect on
plant communities.
A
first step was to look at different environmental factors as relative
predictors of plant occurrence. From the plant surveys we had a simple dataset
showing whether each species was present or absent at each location we sampled.
We also had quantitative data at each location for five gradients of potential
importance to plant distribution: tidal elevation, soil salinity, soil nitrogen
content, soil grain size, and a hydrologic index that quantified the degree of
marine versus river dominance for the estuary from which the data were
collected. The plant and environmental data were put into logistic regression
models for many of the common species. The exciting next step - which I learned
about after encountering a study on butterfly habitat use - was to apply a
technique called hierarchical partitioning. This statistical technique enables
a researcher to assess the relative strengths of effects (independently and
jointly with other factors) of different variables in a statistical model. Like
all statistical methods, it has its limitations (for instance, it doesn’t
perform well with non-linear relationships between dependent and independent
variables), but it seemed like a promising technique to quantify the relative
importance of selected environmental factors on plant distribution.
I ran
the analyses for 20 of the more commonly-occurring species and obtained some
interesting results. First, for quite a few species, soil salinity was the most
important variable in explaining the presence or absence of the species in the
wetlands. In the figure below, for instance, salinity was positively related to
the presence of perennial pickleweed (Sarcocornia
perennis). Pickleweed occurrence was also positively correlated with tidal
elevation, estuarine river-dominance, and soil clay content, though less
strongly. (The positive correlation with river flow seems somewhat
counter-intuitive for this salt-loving species, but may be due to its high
frequency of occurrence from low marsh at our most river-dominated site.)
Elevation
turned out to be the most important variable predicting the presence or absence
of some other species. And, more rarely, soil nitrogen stood out as a key
environmental gradient. Grain size (percent clay) of the soils generally only
weakly correlated with species presence and absence.
The
logistic regression models enabled a species-by-species look at environmental
correlates of plant occurrence, but wetland plant communities in the Pacific Northwest are very diverse and species
associations occur in complex patterns. We used another exciting statistical
technique, non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), to investigate overall
plant composition in our dataset. In a nutshell, NMDS is a computational
technique that aims to represent all of the differences between pairs of
samples in a simple 2 or 3 dimensional graphical display. Its value lies in its
ability to take a complex multi-dimensional dataset and summarize that
information in a visually-intuitive manner from which patterns can be deduced.
The
plot below shows the results of our NMDS analysis based on the abundance of 20
common plant species. Points closer to each other are more similar in terms of
species composition. In the figure, the samples are colored based on their
tidal elevation. Brownish points are plots from lower wetlands (e.g., below
mean higher high water, MHHW) and greenish points are plant assemblages from
high tidal marsh that is less frequently flooded. The analysis shows that plant
communities separate out on an elevation gradient, similar to the patterns of
vertical zonation one would see with invertebrates and algae on a typical rocky
shoreline.
Below
I’ve shown the same NMDS plot, but with points coded by summer-time soil
salinity. Plant composition differs between more saline and fresher wetlands,
but there is a gradual gradient as with elevation.
An
observational study like this is valuable for generating hypotheses about which
environmental factors affect the distribution of different wetland species.
However, we know that species are affected my more than environment itself – interactions
with other species matter too. To more clearly determine causality, and not
just patterns in the data, controlled experiments are needed. With dozens of
species in the tidal wetland flora of Oregon
and many potential abiotic and biological factors of importance, comprehensive
study of this question would be a massive undertaking! In the next two posts,
I’ll discuss some limited experimentation we performed to assess the effects of
a few abiotic factors on plant growth and germination.
References
Janousek CN and Folger CL. 2014. Variation in tidal wetland plant diversity and composition within and among coastal estuaries: assessing the relative importance of environmental gradients. J. Vegetation Science 25:534-545.
Watson EB and Byrne R. 2009. Abundance and diversity of tidal marsh plants along the salinity gradient of the San Francisco Estuary: implications for global change ecology. Plant Ecology 205:113-128.
References
Janousek CN and Folger CL. 2014. Variation in tidal wetland plant diversity and composition within and among coastal estuaries: assessing the relative importance of environmental gradients. J. Vegetation Science 25:534-545.
Watson EB and Byrne R. 2009. Abundance and diversity of tidal marsh plants along the salinity gradient of the San Francisco Estuary: implications for global change ecology. Plant Ecology 205:113-128.
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