An Evaluation of Leaf Biomass : Length Ratio as a Tool for Nondestructive Assessment in Eelgrass (Zostera marinaL.)

Author:

Echavarria-Heras Hector1,Solana-Arellano Elena1,Lee Kun-Seop2,Hosokawa Shinya3,Franco-Vizcaíno Ernesto14

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, Km 107 Carretera Tijuana, 22860 Ensenada, BCS, Mexico

2. Department of Biology, Pusan National University, Pusan, Republic of Korea

3. Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Research Group, Port and Airport Research Institute, Nagase, Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan

4. Department of Science and Environmental Policy, California State University Monterey Bay, 100 Campus Center, Seaside, CA 93955, USA

Abstract

The characterization of biomass and its dynamics provides valuable information for the assessment of natural and transplanted eelgrass populations. The need for simple, nondestructive assessments has led to the use of the leaf biomass-to-length ratio for converting leaf-length measurements, which can be easily obtained, to leaf growth rates through the plastochrone method. Using data on leaf biomass and length collected in three natural eelgrass populations and a mesocosm, we evaluated the suitability of a leaf weight-to-length ratio for nondestructive assessments. For the data sets considered, the isometric scaling that sustains the weight-to-length proxy always produced inconsistent fittings, and for leaf-lengths greater than a threshold value, the conversion of leaf length to biomass generated biased estimations. In contrast, an allometric scaling of leaf biomass and length was highly consistent in all the cases considered. And these nondestructive assessments generated reliable levels of reproducibility in leaf biomass for all the ranges of variability in leaf lengths. We argue that the use of allometric scaling for the representation of leaf biomass in terms of length provides a more reliable approach for estimating eelgrass biomass.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Environmental Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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