Biomass and above-ground productivity of salt-marsh plants in south-eastern Australia
PJ Clarke and CA Jacoby
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 45(8) 1521 - 1528
Abstract The above-ground biomass of three dominant salt-marsh vascular plants (Juncus kraussii, Sarcocornia
quinquejlora and Sporobolus virginicus) was measured to assess both spatial and temporal variation and to
provide baseline data. Additionally, the culm dynamics of the rush J. kraussii were measured so that aboveground
productivity could be estimated.
No distinct seasonal patterns were detected in above-ground biomass in J. kraussii. Averaged over all
sites and times, the above-ground biomass of J. kraussii was 1116 g dry weight m-2. Culms are replaced
annually, hence standing crop approximated annual above-ground productivity. Much of the dead aboveground
biomass appears to accumulate in the upper marsh, as evidenced by the elevated nutrient and
organic carbon content of the soil there relative to the sediment in the mangrove zone. Above-ground
biomass of the decumbent perennial grass Sporobolus virginicus and the procumbent perennial chenopod
Sarcocornia quinqueflora showed no consistent spatial or temporal trends. The above-ground standing
crops of these species were about one-third that of J. kraussii.
Full text doi:10.1071/MF9941521
© CSIRO 1994





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