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Contrasting Recolonization Strategies in Multi-Species Seagrass Meadows
Authors:Rene N Rollon  Erik D De Ruyter Van Steveninck  Wim Van Vierssen  Miguel D Fortes
Institution:

a International Institute for Infrastructural, Hydraulic and Environmental Engineering, Westvest 7, PO Box 3015, 2601 DA, Delft, The Netherlands

b Present address: Marine Science Institute, College of Science, University of the Philippines, Diliman 1101, Quezon City, Philippines

Abstract:This study shows that in a multi-species seagrass meadow in a shallow and clear-water site, all the former seagrass species were able to recolonize in the artificially created gaps of 0.25 m2 in size within ca. 2 yr. Extrapolation of the recolonization curves of the different species predicted a full recovery within 10 yr post-disturbance. Fitted curves for the dominant species Enhalus acoroides and Thalassia hemprichii showed contrasting strategies, the latter having a comparatively high intrinsic rate, achieving full recovery within ca. 2 yr post-disturbance. E. acoroides was the latest species to establish and the projected full-recovery time was among the longest (ca. 10 yr). The effect of timing of gap creation was generally not significant (except for Syringodium isoetifolium) neither was the temporal variation in density of most species outside the gaps. As recolonization by sexual propagules was found to be low, increasing the gap size would most probably require a much longer recovery period. A crude estimate for E. acoroides would be >10 yr for 1 m2 of gap. Further, since the densities of most seagrass species vary significantly between sites, and colonization rates depend on adjacent seagrass densities, the recovery curves would also be different across sites.
Keywords:coastal zone  community composition  ecosystem disturbance  seagrass  Enhalus acoroides  Thalassia hemprichii  restoration ecology
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