In the battle between native and invasive wetland plants, a new Duke
University study finds climate change may tip the scales in favor of the
invaders -- but it’s going to be more a war of attrition than a frontal
assault.
“Changing surface-water temperatures, rainfall patterns and river
flows will likely give Japanese knotweed, hydrilla, honeysuckle, privet
and other noxious invasive species an edge over less adaptable native
species,” said Neal E. Flanagan, visiting assistant professor at the
Duke Wetland Center, who led the research.
Increased human disturbances to watersheds and nutrient and sediment
runoff into riparian wetlands over the coming century will further boost
the invasive species’ advantage, the study found.
“It’s death by a thousand small cuts. Each change, on its own, may
yield only a slight advantage for invasive species, but cumulatively
they add up,” said co-author Curtis J. Richardson, director of the Duke
Wetland Center and professor of resource ecology at Duke’s Nicholas
School of the Environment.
If left unchecked, over time these change will reduce the diversity
of plants found in many wetlands and could affect the wetlands’ ability
to mitigate flooding, store carbon, filter out water pollution and
provide habitat for native wildlife, the authors said.
The scientists published their peer-reviewed findings this week in the journal Ecological Applications.
The study, funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
is the first large-scale field experiment to simulate how future
environmental changes linked to global warming and land-use change will
affect plant communities in major river systems in the U.S. Southeast.
It was conducted using plant species and biomass surveys, continuous
real-time measurements of water levels and water temperatures, and
statistical modeling of long-term plant abundance and growing conditions
at 24 riparian floodplain sites in North Carolina and Virginia over a
three-year period.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projects that
surface-water temperatures in the Southeast will increase by 1 to 5
degrees Celsius by the year 2100. Increased evaporation will reduce
surface water base flows, while a 5 percent to 30 percent increase in
precipitation, mostly in the form of intense storms, will cause pulsed
hydrology -- sudden, short-term rises -- in water levels.
As these changes occur, the annual timing of when wetland soils warm
up in spring will fluctuate and may no longer be synchronized with when
river levels drop, Flanagan said.
This de-synchronization will affect
all floodplain plants, but the natural phenotypic plasticity of
invasive species allows them to adapt to it better than native species,
which need both exposed soil and warmer temperatures to germinate.
As native species’ germination rates decline, invasives will move in
and fill the void, their increased abundance fueled by high levels of
nutrients flowing into the wetlands in runoff from upstream agriculture
and other disturbances.
"These findings underscore the need for us to better understand the
interaction between climate, land use and nutrient management in
maintaining the viability of native riparian plant communities,"
Richardson said.
“What makes this study so novel is that we used a network of natural,
existing riparian wetlands to simulate the long-term impacts of
IPCC-projected changes to water temperature and flow over the coming
century,” Richardson added.
Eighteen of the 24 wetlands used in the study were located downriver
from dams or power plants built at least 50 years ago, he said. Ten of
these wetlands were classified as warm sites, because water discharged
back into the river by the upstream dam or power plant was heated by
steam turbines or pulled from higher in a reservoir, where water
temperatures were warmer.
Eight wetlands were classified as cold sites because the upstream
dams pulled their outflow water from deeper in reservoirs, where
temperatures were more than 5 degrees Celsius cooler than at warm sites.
“This allowed us to simulate the effect of long-term changes in water
temperatures on native and invasive species abundance,” Richardson
said. All 18 dams regulated their outflow of water, allowing the team
to simulate the effects of projected lower base flow and increased storm
flows. Six wetlands in the study were located on undammed rivers and
served as control sites.
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