Response of juvenile Melaleuca halmaturorum to flooding: Management implications for a seasonal wetland, Bool Lagoon, South Australia
M Denton and GG Ganf
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 45(8) 1395 - 1408
Abstract The response of M. halmaturorum was measured to determine the ability of juvenile plants to survive
flooding and to examine how this influenced plant growth. Seedlings and one- and two-year-old plants
were flooded to 0% (control), 50% or 100% of their initial height for periods of three to 14 weeks, followed
by an eight-week recovery period. Only 22% of seedlings survived five weeks of 100% coverage, but these
died during the recovery period. The older plants survived the flooding treatments well, but as duration
increased so survival through the recovery period declined. After 100% coverage for six weeks followed
by the recovery period, only 29% survived. Stem linear extension rates corresponding to these survival
rates were used to predict the survival of juvenile M. halmaturorum in Bool Lagoon, South Australia. The
results showed that, with the current water regime, natural recruitment would occur only at the highest
elevation but that this could be improved by planting older, taller plants at lower elevations. Indices of
growth showed that flooded plants performed poorly compared with the controls as duration and percentage
of coverage increased. The data suggested that coverage inhibited plant growth during the flood period, but
there was a further, interactive response to duration that became apparent after the post-flood recovery
period. An interpretation of these results is that M. halmaturorum in its juvenile stages is intermediate
between a flood-sensitive and a flood-tolerant species because it is able to recover from short floods of
three weeks or less but performs poorly if floods exceed six to nine weeks.
Full text doi:10.1071/MF9941395
© CSIRO 1994





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