Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/51525
Título: Ecoengineering Solutions for the Impairment of Spreading and Growth of Invasive Spartina patens in Mediterranean Salt Marshes
Autor: Cruz De Carvalho, Ricardo
Feijão, Eduardo
Duarte, Irina
Pinto, Vanessa
Silva, Marisa
Matos, Ana Rita
da Silva, Anabela Bernardes
Caçador, Isabel
Reis-Santos, Patrick
Fonseca, Vanessa F.
Duarte, Bernardo
Data: Ago-2021
Editora: Frontiers
Citação: Cruz de Carvalho R, Feijão E, Duarte I, Pinto V, Silva M, Matos AR, da Silva AB, Caçador I, Reis-Santos P, Fonseca VF and Duarte B (2021) Ecoengineering Solutions for the Impairment of Spreading and Growth of Invasive Spartina patens in Mediterranean Salt Marshes. Front. Mar. Sci. 8:699528. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2021.699528
Resumo: The invasion of natural communities by non-indigenous species represents one of the most serious threats to biodiversity. Understanding the ecophysiology of invasive species can provide insights into potential physiological handicaps relative to native species. By doing so, we can leverage the development of ecoengineering solutions for the removal of non-indigenous species, preferably using non-chemical methods. Spartina patens is a known invasive species of cordgrass aggressively proliferating in Mediterranean salt marshes, producing impenetrable monospecific stands. As its occurrence is delimited by the upper high tide water level, we hypothesized that S. patens is intolerant to waterlogging. Therefore, we developed a field experiment where strands of S. patens were kept waterlogged over the entire tidal cycle for 30 days. At the end of the experimental period, plants in the trial plots exhibited severe stress symptoms at different physiological levels compared with control plots (no intervention). At the photobiological level, intervened plants exhibited lower efficiency in producing chemical energy from light, whilst at the biochemical level waterlogging impaired the antioxidant system and increased lipid peroxidation products. Furthermore, the application of chlorophyll a pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) fluorometry, a non-invasive technique, allowed us to evaluate the effectiveness of the implemented measures, being the tool that provided the best separation between the control and intervened population. Considering the physiological traits observed here, ecoengineering solutions based on increased waterlogging of S. patens stands, can be a low-cost and efficient measure to reduce the spreading and growth of this invasive species in the Mediterranean and other salt marshes worldwide with little disturbance.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/51525
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.699528
Aparece nas colecções:cE3c - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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