The role of sexual reproduction and water regime in shaping the distribution patterns of clonal emergent aquatic plants
N Rea and GG Ganf
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 45(8) 1469 - 1479
Abstract The reproductive characteristics of T. procerum in three lagoons in the Mediterranean south-east of South
Australia were used to investigate the role of water regime in the often heterogeneous and patchy
distribution of aquatic vegetation. A theoretical explanation for these patterns, based on sexual reproduction
vis-a-vis seedling establishment, is proposed. Owing to the unpredictable nature of seed dispersal and the
narrow range of suitable conditions for germination and establishment that result from fluctuating and
variable water levels, establishment events are spatially and temporally dynamic. These features may be
important for maintaining species distribution, species survival and habitat diversity. Population resilience
through genetically heterogeneous stands is another outcome. The implications of sexual reproduction by
clonal plants are discussed, as is the need to maintain the conditions that plants need to flower, germinate
and become established. The unpredictable nature of establishment events makes them difficult to manage.
Regulation and pondageldrainage may be having a profound effect on the survival of many aquatic plant
species owing to their inability to regenerate under such conditions.
Full text doi:10.1071/MF9941469
© CSIRO 1994





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