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MEPS 267:121-131 (2004)

Abstract

Recruitment of Thalassia testudinum seedlings into physically disturbed seagrass beds

Paula E. Whitfield1,*, W. Judson Kenworthy1, Michael J. Durako2, Kamille K. Hammerstrom1, Manuel F. Merello3

1NOAA Beaufort Laboratory, 101 Pivers Island Road, Beaufort, North Carolina 28516, USA
2University of North Carolina-Wilmington, Center for Marine Science, 5600 Marvin Moss Road, Wilmington, North Carolina 28409, USA
3Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Florida Marine Research Institute, 100 Eighth Ave. S.E., St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, USA

*Email: paula.whitfield@noaa.gov

ABSTRACT: Thalassia testudinum seedling recruitment, survival, and growth were examined within physically disturbed seagrass beds in the Florida Keys. Two separate studies were conducted. In the first, a large-scale study, T. testudinum seedlings were surveyed and collected from a large seagrass disturbance (1560 m2), 4.8 yr after the initial impact from a motor-vessel grounding. In the second, a smaller-scale study, T. testudinum seedling recruitment was examined over a 2 yr period within 9 smaller motor-vessel disturbances located within intact T. testudinum beds. In the large-scale study, we reconstructed the age of the seedlings based on shoot production rates from a previous study and from the small-scale study. A total of 79 seedlings were collected that varied in age from young of the year to 4.8 yr old; 6 different seedling cohorts were identified. The average density and rhizome-elongation rate for 1 yr old seedlings were 1 m-2 and 6.6 cm yr-1, respectively. In the small-scale study, we surveyed and permanently marked all newly recruited seedlings; monitoring was conducted 5 more times over a 2 yr period. The average seedling survival after Year 1 was 42%; after Year 2, average survival dropped to 20%. The average seedling density after Year 1 was 0.071 m-2; after Year 2, average density dropped to 0.026 m-2. The average rhizome-elongation rate and shoot-production rate of 1 yr old seedlings were 6 cm yr-1 and 1.8 shoots yr-1, respectively. The results of this study suggest that T. testudinum seedlings are a regular and reliable source of new recruits on seagrass banks in the Florida Keys.

KEY WORDS: Thalassia testudinum · Seedling · Disturbance · Succession · Seagrass · Recovery process · Sexual reproduction

Full text in pdf format

Published in MEPS Vol. 267 (2004) on February 19
Print ISSN: 0171-8630; Online ISSN: 1616-1599. Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2004

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