2017
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-017-0318-y
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Phenotypic Variation Among Invasive Phragmites australis Populations Does Not Influence Salinity Tolerance

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…A large number of studies have confirmed that salt stress mainly limits plant growth and development by osmotic stress, disturbance of cell ion balance, and ion toxicity effects [83][84][85][86][87][88]. The salt content of soil in our study was a limiting effect on the growth indexespecially the significant negative correlation between the surface salt and plant height and stem diameter for Phragmites australis (P<0.05).…”
Section: Spatial Expansion Driving Forces Of Clonal Modules For Phragsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…A large number of studies have confirmed that salt stress mainly limits plant growth and development by osmotic stress, disturbance of cell ion balance, and ion toxicity effects [83][84][85][86][87][88]. The salt content of soil in our study was a limiting effect on the growth indexespecially the significant negative correlation between the surface salt and plant height and stem diameter for Phragmites australis (P<0.05).…”
Section: Spatial Expansion Driving Forces Of Clonal Modules For Phragsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…Salinity covaried with both biomass and water‐table depth, which complicates the observed salinity effect on CH 4 flux. Increased Phragmites biomass and a trend of more rapid CO 2 cycling (greater rates of both NEE and RECO) at the fresher impounded sites with a negative correlation of CO 2 cycling with increased salinity reflects the well documented sensitivity of Phragmites to saline conditions (Burdick et al, 2001; Chambers et al, 2003; Schenck et al, 2018; Vasquez et al, 2006) and suggests that primary production is enhanced with reduced salinity across the gradient. More labile C availability at fresher sites where productivity is high likely stimulates CH 4 production (Hatala et al, 2012; Kim, Chaudhary, et al, 2020; Mozdzer & Megonigal, 2013; Van Der Nat & Middelburg, 1998).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Phragmites biomass and a trend of more rapid CO 2 cycling (greater rates of both NEE and RECO) at the fresher impounded sites with a negative correlation of CO 2 cycling with increased salinity reflects the well documented sensitivity of Phragmites to saline conditions (Burdick , 2001;Chambers et al, 2003;Schenck et al, 2018;Vasquez et al, 2006) and suggests that primary production is enhanced with reduced salinity across the gradient. More labile C availability at fresher sites where productivity is high likely stimulates CH 4 production (Hatala et al, 2012;Kim, Chaudhary, et al, 2020;Mozdzer & Megonigal, 2013; Although limited comparable eddy covariance measurements exist in this geographical region, our values suggest a high CO 2 uptake via NEE relative to the −179 ± 32 g C m −2 year −1 reported for a natural tidal salt marsh in northern Massachusetts (Forbrich et al, 2018), −213 g C m −2 year −1 for a restored tidal marsh (Artigas et al, 2015) and −73 g C m −2 year −1 (Schäfer et al, 2019) for a natural tidal marsh in New Jersey, and 138 ± 108 g C m −2 year −1 emission for a tidal salt marsh in Delaware (Vázquez-Lule & Vargas, 2021), while globally averaged NEE for coastal wetlands measured by eddy covariance has been reported at −208 ± 89 g C m −2 year −1 (Lu et al, 2017).…”
Section: Salinity Covaried With Both Biomass and Water-table Depth Whichmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Appropriate salt supplementation can increase fiber content and biomass, making it healthier and more robust ( Guan et al., 2017 ). Soil salinity plays a dominant role in determining the growth of P. australis , and high salinity limits the population’s survival ( Schenck et al., 2018 ; Jiao et al., 2020 ; Zhang et al., 2021b ; Barbafieri et al., 2023 ). The results showed that the variation coefficients of plant height at low tidal flat and biomass at high tidal flat of P. australis were 37.06% and 44.6%, respectively, indicating that these two morphological traits were largely affected by environmental factors ( Table 2 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers found that the tidal P. australis population was more tolerant to salt than the freshwater population, with numerous genes and alleles of antioxidant protection system enzymes related to salt damage ( Holmes et al., 2016 ; Zhang et al., 2020 ), which laid the groundwork for future transgenic engineering and molecular marker development in salt-tolerant plants. However, despite extensive research on the salt tolerance mechanism of P. australis in coastal salt marshes ( Gao et al., 2012 ; Schenck et al., 2018 ; Lambertini et al., 2020 ; Liu et al., 2021 ; Wu et al., 2022 ; Liu et al., 2023 ), there has still been a lack of research focused on the survival strategies and gene expression patterns of P. australis populations along tidal flat gradients in coastal marsh wetlands.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%