Title of article :
Mangrove distribution and mosquito control: transport of Avicennia marina propagules by mosquito-control runnels in southeast Queensland saltmarshes
Author/Authors :
M.J. Breitfuss، نويسنده , , R.M. Connolly، نويسنده , , P.E.R. Dale، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
The saltmarsh–mangrove interface generally constitutes the landward boundary for the grey mangrove Avicennia marina var.
australasica, the most widespread species on southeast Queensland shores. A. marina produces buoyant propagules, which are
dispersed by tidal waters, only infrequently transported to saltmarsh by the highest spring tides. We predicted that runnelling, a
form of habitat modification for mosquito control, transports and deposits mangrove propagules to saltmarsh because the runnels
carry low-amplitude tides that would not normally inundate higher regions of the marsh. To test this, groups of marked A. marina
propagules were released at three runnelled saltmarshes in southeast Queensland during high-amplitude, flooding and lowamplitude,
non-flooding tidal events. The distance propagules were transported from their original starting positions on the
saltmarsh–mangrove interface was measured and analysed to detect differences among groups at different distances from runnels.
Groups of propagules released within 10m of a runnel were always transported significantly further from the starting position and
further up the saltmarsh shore after both flooding and non-flooding tides than any other groups. In addition, the pattern of
stranding on saltmarsh for significantly different groups was closely associated with the path of runnel construction so that propagules
were located either in the runnel or in depressions linked to the runnel that had been isolated mosquito-breeding pools prior
to runnelling. Observations of A. marina plants at other runnelled sites suggest that propagules transported by runnels can establish
and develop to maturity, at least in depressions and runnels, in saltmarsh. The fact that runnels transport propagules to regions of
the saltmarsh beyond their normal limits of dispersion suggests a possible advantage for landward extension of the intertidal
distribution of A. marina at runnelled sites and should be considered in saltmarsh management and mosquito control programmes
in southeast Queensland.
Keywords :
seed dispersal , tidal inundation , saltmarsh–mangrove interface
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science