Author/Authors :
G.R. Bastyan، نويسنده , , M.L. Cambridge، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Transplant trials of the seagrass Posidonia australis were carried out after loss of seagrasses following
eutrophication and increased turbidity in two marine inlets on the south coast of Western Australia.
A pilot study in Oyster Harbour measured survival and growth in situ for 4 years. Long-term survival rates
were high (96–98%), providing plants were anchored into the sediment. All unanchored plants were lost
in the first winter. Following the success of the pilot study, a more comprehensive program began 3 years
later with over 500 transplant units collected from either actively growing edges of nearby patches
(plagiotropic growth form) or within established meadows (orthotropic growth form). Transplant
units from edges expanded at a faster rate compared to units from mid-meadow but increases in shoot
numbers were similar. Growth rates in the first 2.5 years averaged 10–20 cmyr 1 horizontal rhizome
extension, depending on the source of the transplant units, and 4–12 shoots per initial shoot yr 1, depending
on the initial shoot number of the transplant unit. After 5 years, shoot numbers of individual
transplants were similar to shoot densities recorded for natural meadows, >500 shootsm 2. Approximately,
10% of transplants from mid-meadow flowered in the first year, whereas transplants from edges
flowered only after 5 years.
Transplant trials were also established in nearby Princess Royal Harbour at a site selected to test the
effect of disturbance by bioturbation from large sand-burrowing worms or by sediment erosion. Survival
was lower than in Oyster Harbour, 75–89% in areas with bioturbation but only 14% in areas where
sediments were eroded. Growth was poor, <1–2 shoots per shoot yr 1 with high shoot mortality, and low
rates of increase in rhizome length, <5 cmyr 1. In areas affected by worm bioturbation, there was almost
no horizontal expansion of plants because rhizomes grew vertically to keep pace with sediment
deposition.
This study showed that Posidonia australis could be transplanted with a high degree of success into
a protected embayment previously vegetated with seagrass meadows. After 4 years, flower and seed
production had occurred, and transplants spaced 1 m apart began merging. By the fifth year, individual
transplant units could no longer be distinguished and planted areas resembled a natural meadow. These
findings have important implications for restoration of impaired Posidonia habitats in Australia, using
conventional low-cost techniques for transplantation once the sources of injury have abated.