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Submerged macrophytes in shallow eutrophic lakes - regulating factors and ecosystem effects

Strand, John A LU (1999)
Abstract
In this thesis I have studied factors that regulate submerged macrophyte abundance, morphology and distribution in shallow eutrophic lakes, and how submerged macrophytes may affect the ecosystem. Light attenuation through the water column (turbidity and water depth) is probably not the most important factor regulating the distribution of submerged vegetation in macrophyte dominated shallow eutrophic lakes, e.g. due to clear water and the plants capability of morphological responses. However, during plant establishment and re-colonisation of vegetation (natural or induced shifts between turbid and clear-water states) turbidity and water depth are likely to be of greater importance. It was also found that periphyton may be a ?double-edged... (More)
In this thesis I have studied factors that regulate submerged macrophyte abundance, morphology and distribution in shallow eutrophic lakes, and how submerged macrophytes may affect the ecosystem. Light attenuation through the water column (turbidity and water depth) is probably not the most important factor regulating the distribution of submerged vegetation in macrophyte dominated shallow eutrophic lakes, e.g. due to clear water and the plants capability of morphological responses. However, during plant establishment and re-colonisation of vegetation (natural or induced shifts between turbid and clear-water states) turbidity and water depth are likely to be of greater importance. It was also found that periphyton may be a ?double-edged sword? in shallow lake ecosystems. Increased nutrient uptake by periphyton due to increased available surface area, when submerged macrophytes are abundant, is an important mechanism stabilising the lake in a clear-water state. However, periphyton affect submerged macrophytes negatively, and wave exposure dependent periphyton growth might initiate shifts from clear-water to turbid states due to the loss of submerged vegetation at sheltered sites. Grazing by crayfish affected seedlings but not mature plants, indicating that plants can outgrow grazers, but also that the time of grazing (in the life-history of the plant) is important for the ecological implications. Waterfowl grazing was higher at sheltered sites and may also contribute to initiate shifts from clear-water to turbid states. Submerged macrophyte seed bank is highly variable within and between lakes, and the importance of the seed bank for the vegetation dynamics seems to vary depending on lake history, wave exposure and the species involved. Submerged macrophyte re-colonisation is important for successful biomanipulation. Important factors for re-colonisation are: sufficient Secchi depth improvment, lake morphometry, species composition of the remnant populations, and low grazing pressure. Viable seed banks do not seem to be necessary but are likely to increase the probability of re-colonisation, and diversity. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Østergaard Andersen, Frede, Odense University, Denmark
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
marine biology, Hydrobiology, plasticity, seed banks, periphyton, grazing, alternative stable state, aquatic ecology, limnology, Marinbiologi, limnologi, akvatisk ekologi
pages
147 pages
publisher
Limnology, Department of Ecology, Lund University
defense location
Ecology Building, Lund, Sweden
defense date
1999-06-03 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: SE-LUNDBDS/NBLI-99/1037+147pp
ISBN
91-7105-111-2
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Limnology (Closed 2011) (011007000)
id
70bcd092-7e3a-46b9-8e6e-fe8bf8961f62 (old id 39717)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 12:08:36
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:09:14
@phdthesis{70bcd092-7e3a-46b9-8e6e-fe8bf8961f62,
  abstract     = {{In this thesis I have studied factors that regulate submerged macrophyte abundance, morphology and distribution in shallow eutrophic lakes, and how submerged macrophytes may affect the ecosystem. Light attenuation through the water column (turbidity and water depth) is probably not the most important factor regulating the distribution of submerged vegetation in macrophyte dominated shallow eutrophic lakes, e.g. due to clear water and the plants capability of morphological responses. However, during plant establishment and re-colonisation of vegetation (natural or induced shifts between turbid and clear-water states) turbidity and water depth are likely to be of greater importance. It was also found that periphyton may be a ?double-edged sword? in shallow lake ecosystems. Increased nutrient uptake by periphyton due to increased available surface area, when submerged macrophytes are abundant, is an important mechanism stabilising the lake in a clear-water state. However, periphyton affect submerged macrophytes negatively, and wave exposure dependent periphyton growth might initiate shifts from clear-water to turbid states due to the loss of submerged vegetation at sheltered sites. Grazing by crayfish affected seedlings but not mature plants, indicating that plants can outgrow grazers, but also that the time of grazing (in the life-history of the plant) is important for the ecological implications. Waterfowl grazing was higher at sheltered sites and may also contribute to initiate shifts from clear-water to turbid states. Submerged macrophyte seed bank is highly variable within and between lakes, and the importance of the seed bank for the vegetation dynamics seems to vary depending on lake history, wave exposure and the species involved. Submerged macrophyte re-colonisation is important for successful biomanipulation. Important factors for re-colonisation are: sufficient Secchi depth improvment, lake morphometry, species composition of the remnant populations, and low grazing pressure. Viable seed banks do not seem to be necessary but are likely to increase the probability of re-colonisation, and diversity.}},
  author       = {{Strand, John A}},
  isbn         = {{91-7105-111-2}},
  keywords     = {{marine biology; Hydrobiology; plasticity; seed banks; periphyton; grazing; alternative stable state; aquatic ecology; limnology; Marinbiologi; limnologi; akvatisk ekologi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Limnology, Department of Ecology, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Submerged macrophytes in shallow eutrophic lakes - regulating factors and ecosystem effects}},
  year         = {{1999}},
}