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We tested the recolonization of the phytobenthic community in the tailwaters of Glen Canyon Dam following long- and short-term experimentally induced desiccation. The response of Cladophora glomerata, Oscillatoria spp., miscellaneous phytobenthos species and periphyton was studied over 18 weeks using three treatments: (1) undisturbed control cobbles from the submerged zone; (2) cobbles desiccated and replaced into the submerged zone; and (3) cobbles desiccated and replaced into the varial zone. Periphyton density and compositional response resulting from these treatments were also examined. Desiccation treatments were significantly different in biomass from controls throughout the study. The biomass of desiccated...
To identify potential constraints on willow (Salix spp.) seedling establishment in montane riparian communities in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA we established a controlled experiment to examine the effects of soil texture and elevation above river stage on willow seedling survival. We followed seedling survival rates over two summers in paired course- and fine-textured plots established at three elevations on study area point bars. Patterns of seedling survival changed over the course of the study, and after two growing seasons, greater seedling survival rates were observed in fine-textured plots and plots occurring at high and intermediate elevations. Our results indicate that both soil water availability...
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The basic parameters of water relations were measured in Sphagnum mosses. The relationships of these parameters to the photosynthetic response to desiccation and the ecology of these mosses were then tested. METHODS: The water relations parameters of six Sphagnum species (mosses typical of wet habitats) and Atrichum androgynum (a moss more typical of mesophytic conditions) were calculated from pressure-volume isotherms. Photosynthetic properties during and after moderate desiccation were monitored by chlorophyll fluorescence. KEY RESULTS: When desiccated, the hummock-forming species S. fuscum and S. magellanicum lost more water before turgor started dropping than other sphagna inhabiting less...