Back to Search
Start Over
ABOVEGROUND PRODUCTION IN SOUTHEASTERN FLOODPLAIN FORESTS: A TEST OF THE SUBSIDY–STRESS HYPOTHESIS
- Source :
- Ecology. 78:370-384
- Publication Year :
- 1997
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 1997.
-
Abstract
- It has been hypothesized that periodically flooded forests have higher rates of aboveground net primary production than upland forests and near-continuously flooded forests, but a competing hypothesis holds that the benefits of periodic inputs of nutrients and water may be diminished by stresses associated with anaerobic soils or drought. To test these hypotheses, we measured groundwater table depths and aboveground productivity in floodplain forests of South Carolina and Louisiana. We established paired plots on locally dry, intermediate, and wet topographic positions across three hydrologic transects in each state. These plots encompassed upland hardwood, bottomland hardwood, and cypress swamp forests. Measurements of leaf litterfall, wood production, and groundwater table depth were made in 1987 and 1988. We then used mean growing-season water depth (MWD) to group the plots into three classes: wet (>0 cm), intermediate (0 to -60 cm), and dry ( 25% dead stems) the slope of this line was 5 times greater (-24 gm-2yr- -cm- ). We conclude that the subsidy-stress hypothesis does not adequately describe patterns of NPP across Southeastern U.S. floodplain forests. Conditions of periodic flooding and flowing water do not often lead to high rates of productivity compared with upland forests. However, extensive flooding is nearly always a significant stress on forest productivity, particularly when the flooding regime has been recently perturbed through levee construc- tion or impoundment. Our data support a more complex interaction between subsidy and stress factors.
Details
- ISSN :
- 00129658
- Volume :
- 78
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........188dda60be1b8317842c5af3b12c7e5e