Document Type

Conference Item

Publication Date

10-1-2012

Abstract

Seagrasses are rhizomatous clonal plants that grow submerged in coastal waters where burial under sediment - induced by bioturbation and tropical storms - is common. The effect of burial may be moderated by species-specific differences in clonal integration (resource translocation) but this has never been tested for seagrasses, in particular tropical seagrasses in multispecies meadows. In this study, we seek the thresholds of response of 4 seagrasses of varying sizes to burial, and we ask whether clonal integration has an effect on moderating these responses. Our study site is a 4 m-deep meadow in Pulau Tinggi, Malaysia. Plants in mixed stands were buried under 0, 2, 4,8 and 16 cm of sediment for 27 days, with treatments divided into those with intact rhizomes and severed rhizomes. All species tolerated burial of up to 4 cm without adverse effects but significant reductions in shoot density and biomass become evident at 8 ern of burial. Furthermore, larger species such as Cymodocea serrulata and Syringodium isoetifolium were strong integrators, i.e. they may provide support for buried shoots, whereas smaller species such as Halophila ovalis and Halodule uninervis were weak integrators. We discuss the implications of our results in the context of how tropical seagrass communities may change as a result of undergoing burial at different spatial scales.

Keywords

Ecosystem, Coastal water, Seagrasses, Species

Divisions

arts

Event Title

2nd Conference for Regional Cooperation in Ocean and Earth Science Research in the South China Sea

Event Location

University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Event Dates

21-24 October 2012

Event Type

conference

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