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Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments?

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dc.contributor.author Schachtschneider, K
dc.contributor.author Reinecke, K
dc.date.accessioned 2014-07-18T10:02:46Z
dc.date.available 2014-07-18T10:02:46Z
dc.date.issued 2014-04
dc.identifier.citation Schachtschneider, K and Reinecke, K. 2014. Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments? Water SA, vol. 40(2), pp 287-296 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0378-4738
dc.identifier.uri http://www.ajol.info/index.php/wsa/article/view/102225/92262
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7513
dc.description Copyright: 2014 Water Research Commission. This is an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version is published in Water SA, vol. 40(2), pp 287-296 en_US
dc.description.abstract Riparian tree species, growing under different conditions of water availability, can adapt their physiology to maximise their survival chances. Rivers in South Africa may flow perennially, seasonally or ephemerally (episodically). Different riparian species are adapted to survive under each of these different flow regimes by making use of surface, ground, soil, rainwater, or some combination of these. These water sources are available to varying degrees, depending on local climatic, hydrological, geohydrological and geomorphological conditions. This paper tests physiological differences among trees along rivers with varying flow regimes. In this study 3 parameters were selected and tested, namely wood density, specific leaf area and water use efficiency through stable carbon isotope measurements. All three parameters are quick, simple and cheap to determine and as such their value for standard-procedure river monitoring programmes or environmental flow requirement procedures was tested. Acacia erioloba is an arid-adapted riparian tree along the ephemeral Kuiseb (Namibia) and Kuruman (South Africa) Rivers that shows decreasing specific leaf area and increasing wood density correlating with deeper groundwater levels. Intraspecific changes for specific leaf area and carbon isotope values were demonstrated for Acacia mellifera and Croton gratissimus at varying distances from the active channel of the seasonal Mokolo River (South Africa). No significant differences in physiology were noted for Salix mucronata, Brabejum stellatifolium and Metrosideros angustifolia, growing along the perennial Molenaars and Sanddrifskloof Rivers (South Africa) under reduced flow conditions. Only the measurement of specific leaf area recurrently showed that significant physiological differences for trees occurred along rivers of the drier flow regime spectrum (seasonal and ephemeral). As such, this physiological measurement may be a valuable indicator for water stress, while the other measurements might provide more conclusive results if a larger sampling size were used. Specific leaf area, in conjunction with other carefully picked water stress measurement methods, could be considered for monitoring programmes during environmental flow assessments, river health monitoring exercises and restoration projects. This would be particularly valuable in rivers without permanent flow, where there is little species-specific knowledge and where current monitoring methods are unsuited. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Water Research Commission en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;12971
dc.subject Ecophysiology en_US
dc.subject Wood density en_US
dc.subject Specific leaf areas en_US
dc.subject Environmental flow assessments en_US
dc.subject EFAs en_US
dc.subject River flow regimes en_US
dc.subject Riparian tree species en_US
dc.title Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments? en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Schachtschneider, K., & Reinecke, K. (2014). Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments?. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7513 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Schachtschneider, K, and K Reinecke "Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments?." (2014) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7513 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Schachtschneider K, Reinecke K. Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments?. 2014; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7513. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Schachtschneider, K AU - Reinecke, K AB - Riparian tree species, growing under different conditions of water availability, can adapt their physiology to maximise their survival chances. Rivers in South Africa may flow perennially, seasonally or ephemerally (episodically). Different riparian species are adapted to survive under each of these different flow regimes by making use of surface, ground, soil, rainwater, or some combination of these. These water sources are available to varying degrees, depending on local climatic, hydrological, geohydrological and geomorphological conditions. This paper tests physiological differences among trees along rivers with varying flow regimes. In this study 3 parameters were selected and tested, namely wood density, specific leaf area and water use efficiency through stable carbon isotope measurements. All three parameters are quick, simple and cheap to determine and as such their value for standard-procedure river monitoring programmes or environmental flow requirement procedures was tested. Acacia erioloba is an arid-adapted riparian tree along the ephemeral Kuiseb (Namibia) and Kuruman (South Africa) Rivers that shows decreasing specific leaf area and increasing wood density correlating with deeper groundwater levels. Intraspecific changes for specific leaf area and carbon isotope values were demonstrated for Acacia mellifera and Croton gratissimus at varying distances from the active channel of the seasonal Mokolo River (South Africa). No significant differences in physiology were noted for Salix mucronata, Brabejum stellatifolium and Metrosideros angustifolia, growing along the perennial Molenaars and Sanddrifskloof Rivers (South Africa) under reduced flow conditions. Only the measurement of specific leaf area recurrently showed that significant physiological differences for trees occurred along rivers of the drier flow regime spectrum (seasonal and ephemeral). As such, this physiological measurement may be a valuable indicator for water stress, while the other measurements might provide more conclusive results if a larger sampling size were used. Specific leaf area, in conjunction with other carefully picked water stress measurement methods, could be considered for monitoring programmes during environmental flow assessments, river health monitoring exercises and restoration projects. This would be particularly valuable in rivers without permanent flow, where there is little species-specific knowledge and where current monitoring methods are unsuited. DA - 2014-04 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Ecophysiology KW - Wood density KW - Specific leaf areas KW - Environmental flow assessments KW - EFAs KW - River flow regimes KW - Riparian tree species LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2014 SM - 0378-4738 T1 - Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments? TI - Riparian trees as common denominators across the river flow spectrum: are ecophysiological methods useful tools in environmental flow assessments? UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7513 ER - en_ZA


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