Rehydration of degraded wetlands: Understanding drivers of vegetation community trajectories

Author:

Nocentini Andrea12ORCID,Redwine Jed13ORCID,Gaiser Evelyn24ORCID,Hill Troy1ORCID,Hoffman Sophia24ORCID,Kominoski John S.24ORCID,Sah Jay2ORCID,Shinde Dilip5,Surratt Donatto6

Affiliation:

1. South Florida Natural Resource Center, National Park Service Homestead Florida USA

2. Institute of Environment Florida International University Miami Florida USA

3. Environmental Resource Management Department Seminole Tribe of Florida Clewiston Florida USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences Florida International University Miami Florida USA

5. Everglades and Dry Tortugas National Parks Homestead Florida USA

6. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, National Park Service Boynton Beach Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractDegradation of wetland ecosystems results from loss of hydrologic connectivity, nutrient enrichment, and altered fire regimes, among other factors. It is uncertain how drivers of wetland ecosystem processes and wetland vegetation communities interact in reversing the ecological trajectory from degraded to restored conditions. We analyzed biogeochemical and vegetation data collected in wetlands of the Florida Everglades at the start of (2015) and during (2018 and 2021) the initial stages of rehydration. Our objectives were to analyze the allocation of carbon and nutrients among ecosystem compartments and correlated trajectories of vegetation community change following rehydration, to identify the drivers of change, including fire, and analyze macrophyte species‐specific responses to drivers. We expected to see changes in vegetation toward more hydric communities that would differ based on wetland baseline conditions and the magnitude of the hydrologic change. During the study period, both length of inundation and surface water depth increased throughout wetlands in the region, and four fires occurred, which affected 51% of the sampling locations. We observed biogeochemical shifts in the wetland landscape, driven by both hydrology and fire. Total phosphorus concentrations in soil and flocculent detrital material decreased, while soil carbon:phosphorus and nitrogen:phosphorus mass ratios increased at sites further away from water management infrastructure. Transitions in vegetation communities were driven by an increase in hydroperiods and by the distinct changes in nutrient concentrations or soil stoichiometric ratios in each subregion. The abundance of macrophyte species typical of short‐hydroperiod prairies strongly decreased, while dominant long‐hydroperiod species, such as Eleocharis cellulosa, expanded. Fire facilitated the expansion of thickly vegetated plumes of invasive Typha at sites close to the water inflow sources. Overall, restored hydrology shifted vegetation community composition toward higher abundance of long‐hydroperiod species within six years. In contrast, removal of invasive vegetation controlled by soil phosphorus concentrations will likely require long‐term and interactive restoration strategies.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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