Impacts of Cattle on the Vegetation Structure of Mangroves

被引:0
|
作者
Todd E. Minchinton
Hannah T. Shuttleworth
Justin A. Lathlean
Russell A. McWilliam
Trevor J. Daly
机构
[1] University of Wollongong,Centre for Sustainable Ecosystem Solutions and School of Earth, Atmospheric and Life Sciences
[2] New South Wales Department of Primary Industries,undefined
来源
Wetlands | 2019年 / 39卷
关键词
Grazing; Herbivory; Recruitment; Saltmarsh; Trampling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Across the globe coastal wetlands have been lost and degraded due to agriculture. Here we test hypotheses that there are differences in vegetation structure of the mangrove Avicennia marina at locations with or without cattle in the lower Shoalhaven River Estuary in New South Wales, Australia. We sampled the pneumatophores, seedlings, saplings, and trees within the mangrove forest and landward of the forest where cattle are most active. Areas with cattle had fewer trees, and their lowest branches were more than 2 m above the ground, giving trees an umbrella-shaped morphology. Although abundances of saplings and seedlings were highly variable among locations, plants at both stages were shortest along the landward side of the forest in the presence of cattle and seedlings were bushier, suggesting consumption of the apical shoots. A reduction in pneumatophore density and the highest proportion of branched pneumatophores occurred along the landward side of the forest in the presence of cattle, indicating impacts of trampling. Prospects for regeneration of the mangroves in the presence of cattle appear limited due to grazing, physical disturbance and trampling across multiple life history stages. Livestock paddocks should be fenced to exclude cattle and prevent degradation of these coastal intertidal habitats.
引用
收藏
页码:1119 / 1127
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Global Sensitivity Analysis for Canopy Reflectance and Vegetation Indices of Mangroves
    Niu, Chunyue
    Phinn, Stuart
    Roelfsema, Chris
    REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (13)
  • [32] Comparison of prey availability for Setophaga petechia gundlachi (Aves: Parulidae) between two mangroves with different vegetation structure
    Rodriguez-Ochoa, Alejandro
    Acosta Cruz, Martin
    CALDASIA, 2021, 43 (01) : 28 - 38
  • [33] Middle Eocene mangroves and vegetation changes in the Maracaibo Basin, Venezuela
    Rull, V
    PALAIOS, 1998, 13 (03) : 287 - 296
  • [34] Vegetation and soil characteristics as indicators of restoration trajectories in restored mangroves
    Salmo, Severino G., III
    Lovelock, Catherine
    Duke, Norman C.
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2013, 720 (01) : 1 - 18
  • [35] Rumen bacterial community structure impacts feed efficiency in beef cattle
    Paz, Henry A.
    Hales, Kristin E.
    Wells, James E.
    Kuehn, Larry A.
    Freetly, Harvey C.
    Berry, Elaine D.
    Flythe, Michael D.
    Spangler, Matthew L.
    Fernando, Samodha C.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2018, 96 (03) : 1045 - 1058
  • [36] Impacts of climate change induced vegetation shift on estuarine food web structure
    Camacho, M. C.
    Schafer, T. B.
    Osborne, T. Z.
    INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2015, 55 : E228 - E228
  • [37] IMPACTS OF MASTICATION FUEL TREATMENTS ON CALIFORNIA, USA, CHAPARRAL VEGETATION STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION
    Brennan, Teresa J.
    Keeley, Jon E.
    FIRE ECOLOGY, 2017, 13 (03): : 120 - 138
  • [38] Impacts of Mastication Fuel Treatments on California, USA, Chaparral Vegetation Structure and Composition
    Teresa J. Brennan
    Jon E. Keeley
    Fire Ecology, 2017, 13 : 120 - 138
  • [39] Impacts of an invasive alien Proteaceae on native plant species richness and vegetation structure
    Erckie, Laimi
    Adedoja, Opeyemi
    Geerts, Sjirk
    van Wyk, Ernita
    Boatwright, J. Stephen
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2022, 144 : 332 - 338
  • [40] Forest-fire interactions, impacts, and implications: a focus on mangroves
    Dookie, Sabrina
    Ansari, Abdullah Adil
    Jaikishun, Sirpaul
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF FORESTRY SCIENCE, 2025, 55