Lee H. Dietterich , Suhey Ortiz Rosa , Bianca R. Charbonneau , S. Kyle McKay
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Riverine macrophytes play diverse and foundational ecological roles, directly influencing ecosystem properties from local biodiversity to flows of water, energy, nutrients, and sediment, many of which in turn are central to river management. Numerical modeling is thus a crucial tool for understanding macrophyte and ecosystem responses to environmental, ecological, or management changes. However, riverine macrophytes have received relatively limited modeling attention compared to plants in many other aquatic or terrestrial systems. We conducted a systematic review of riverine macrophyte growth models, focusing on mechanisms of macrophyte growth, biomass loss, and feedback effects on river ecosystems. Processes such as light availability, thermal tolerance, nutrient limitation, and mortality were widely included in almost all models meeting the review criteria. However, models varied widely in their inclusion of processes such as shading, scour, and the roles of macrophytes in stream nutrient cycles. There has been relatively little consideration of factors such as dispersal, carbon sources, herbivory, burial, desiccation, and competition for space or nutrients, indicating directions for future modeling work. In light of this, we present a conceptual framework to help guide future macrophyte growth modelers through a thorough consideration of macrophytes’ myriad interactions with their ecosystems. We also emphasize the importance of modularity and accessibility toward improving efforts to model, and in turn manage, riverine ecosystems.
期刊介绍:
Aquatic Botany offers a platform for papers relevant to a broad international readership on fundamental and applied aspects of marine and freshwater macroscopic plants in a context of ecology or environmental biology. This includes molecular, biochemical and physiological aspects of macroscopic aquatic plants as well as the classification, structure, function, dynamics and ecological interactions in plant-dominated aquatic communities and ecosystems. It is an outlet for papers dealing with research on the consequences of disturbance and stressors (e.g. environmental fluctuations and climate change, pollution, grazing and pathogens), use and management of aquatic plants (plant production and decomposition, commercial harvest, plant control) and the conservation of aquatic plant communities (breeding, transplantation and restoration). Specialized publications on certain rare taxa or papers on aquatic macroscopic plants from under-represented regions in the world can also find their place, subject to editor evaluation. Studies on fungi or microalgae will remain outside the scope of Aquatic Botany.