Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach?
Rising sea levels threaten coastal safety by increasing the risk of flooding. Coastal dunes provide a natural form of coastal protection. Understanding drivers that constrain early development of dunes is necessary to assess whether dune development may keep pace with sea-level rise. In this study,...
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Format: | Journal article |
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John Wiley & Sons Ltd
2017
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author | van Puijenbroek, MEB Teichmann, C Meijdam, N Oliveras-Menor, I Berendese, F Limpens, J |
author_facet | van Puijenbroek, MEB Teichmann, C Meijdam, N Oliveras-Menor, I Berendese, F Limpens, J |
author_sort | van Puijenbroek, MEB |
collection | OXFORD |
description | Rising sea levels threaten coastal safety by increasing the risk of flooding. Coastal dunes provide a natural form of coastal protection. Understanding drivers that constrain early development of dunes is necessary to assess whether dune development may keep pace with sea-level rise. In this study, we explored to what extent salt stress experienced by dune building plant species constrains their spatial distribution at the Dutch sandy coast. We conducted a field transplantation experiment and a glasshouse experiment with two dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrigia juncea. In the field, we measured salinity and monitored growth of transplanted grasses in four vegetation zones: (I) nonvegetated beach, (II) E. juncea occurring, (III) both species co-occurring, and (IV) A. arenaria dominant. In the glasshouse, we subjected the two species to six soil salinity treatments, with and without salt spray. We monitored biomass, photosynthesis, leaf sodium, and nutrient concentrations over a growing season. The vegetation zones were weakly associated with summer soil salinity; zone I and II were significantly more saline than zones III and IV. Ammophila arenaria performed equally (zone II) or better (zones III, IV) than E. juncea, suggesting soil salinity did not limit species performance. Both species showed severe winter mortality. In the glasshouse, A. arenaria biomass decreased linearly with soil salinity, presumably as a result of osmotic stress. Elytrigia juncea showed a nonlinear response to soil salinity with an optimum at 0.75% soil salinity. Our findings suggest that soil salinity stress either takes place in winter, or that development of vegetated dunes is less sensitive to soil salinity than hitherto expected. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-07T06:29:15Z |
format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:f5674f55-2490-4873-a990-22308ac496d2 |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T06:29:15Z |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | John Wiley & Sons Ltd |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:f5674f55-2490-4873-a990-22308ac496d22022-03-27T12:27:04ZDoes salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f5674f55-2490-4873-a990-22308ac496d2Symplectic Elements at OxfordJohn Wiley & Sons Ltd2017van Puijenbroek, MEBTeichmann, CMeijdam, NOliveras-Menor, IBerendese, FLimpens, JRising sea levels threaten coastal safety by increasing the risk of flooding. Coastal dunes provide a natural form of coastal protection. Understanding drivers that constrain early development of dunes is necessary to assess whether dune development may keep pace with sea-level rise. In this study, we explored to what extent salt stress experienced by dune building plant species constrains their spatial distribution at the Dutch sandy coast. We conducted a field transplantation experiment and a glasshouse experiment with two dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrigia juncea. In the field, we measured salinity and monitored growth of transplanted grasses in four vegetation zones: (I) nonvegetated beach, (II) E. juncea occurring, (III) both species co-occurring, and (IV) A. arenaria dominant. In the glasshouse, we subjected the two species to six soil salinity treatments, with and without salt spray. We monitored biomass, photosynthesis, leaf sodium, and nutrient concentrations over a growing season. The vegetation zones were weakly associated with summer soil salinity; zone I and II were significantly more saline than zones III and IV. Ammophila arenaria performed equally (zone II) or better (zones III, IV) than E. juncea, suggesting soil salinity did not limit species performance. Both species showed severe winter mortality. In the glasshouse, A. arenaria biomass decreased linearly with soil salinity, presumably as a result of osmotic stress. Elytrigia juncea showed a nonlinear response to soil salinity with an optimum at 0.75% soil salinity. Our findings suggest that soil salinity stress either takes place in winter, or that development of vegetated dunes is less sensitive to soil salinity than hitherto expected. |
spellingShingle | van Puijenbroek, MEB Teichmann, C Meijdam, N Oliveras-Menor, I Berendese, F Limpens, J Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title | Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title_full | Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title_fullStr | Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title_full_unstemmed | Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title_short | Does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses Ammophila arenaria and Elytrichia juncea on the beach? |
title_sort | does salt stress constrain spatial distribution of dune building grasses ammophila arenaria and elytrichia juncea on the beach |
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