Author:
Casanova Michelle T.,Brock Margaret A.
Abstract
Farm dams are an important and common water resource in rural Australia. They
provide relatively permanent surface water for stock and wildlife. They
typically have high turbidity and high levels of disturbance by stock. The
occurrence of charophytes in these water bodies was examined, as well as the
conditions under which they germinated and established. Charophytes were found
in 15% of 65 farm dams surveyed in two regions in New South Wales,
Australia. However, charophytes germinated from 64.5% of farm dam seed
banks sampled (n = 17). Species found were
Chara australis R.Br., C. fibrosa
Agardh ex Bruzelius, C. globularis Thuillier,
C. muelleri A.Br.,
Nitella cristata A.Br. and
N. tasmanica A.Br. Farm dams in which charophytes were
found both in the survey and in the seed bank had lower turbidity, lower
dissolved phosphorus levels and more extensive submerged plant communities
than average. Charophytes established from the seed banks under experimentally
induced water regimes when high water clarity was maintained and the
disturbance of stock grazing was removed. Farm dams can support populations of
perennial and annual charophyte species, and provide a habitat that is less
available in naturally occurring shallow water bodies of the regions.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
23 articles.
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