Extreme flood events hardly affect vegetation
Washington, September 25 : A study by biologists has indicated that extreme flood events in floodplain grasslands affect carabid beetles and molluscs more than plants.
The study was conducted by biologists from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), TU Berlin, the German Federal Institute of Hydrology (BfG), OKON Kallmunz and the ILN Buhl, following several years of observations before and after the Elbe floods of August 2002.
Flow variations are known to be most important drivers in structuring riverine communities.
However, until now, the effects of extreme flood events on the flora and fauna of floodplains have been largely unknown, despite the fact that such events are likely to become more frequent as a result of climate change, according to the researchers.
They surveyed plants, carabid beetles and molluscs in spring and autumn at 36 plots on an Elbe floodplain grassland that was flooded in 2002.
Data from 1998 and 1999 were compared with data from 2003 and 2004.
The samples were taken from marked plots in riverine grassland near Dessau (UNESCO-Biosphere Reserve Riverine Landscape Elbe - Saxony-Anhalt) measuring almost one square kilometre, which is flooded seasonally by the Elbe.
During the 2002 flood, these plots were submerged for at least two weeks, with the water height ranging from 2.4 to 5.4 meters above soil level.
"Our findings show that the mollusc and carabid beetle communities were the most severely affected by the floods," explained Christiane Ilg of the UFZ.
"This disproves the hypothesis that groups with lower mobility are more severely affected by floods being less able to escape, and that they recolonise the flooded habitat only after some delay," she added.
The number of carabid beetles fell from 117 species before the flood to 88 immediately after the flood, but had recovered by 2004, quickly returning to their pre-flood level.
Surprisingly, populations that are adapted to moist conditions and partly are good swimmers were the most severely affected and lost over 40 per cent of their species richness.
A summertime flood can have a drastic effect on the number of carabid beetles. But, because of their high mobility, these species also recover the fastest.
Land snails were not seriously affected by the 2002 summer flood, their abundance and species richness remaining similar to the ones observed in the pre-flood years. Merely, water mollusc species and individuals increased following the flood.
The vegetation was the least affected by the flood. The decline from 113 plant species to 107 is of hardly any significance in statistical terms.
However, further analyses show that the frequency of several species drastically decreased whereas other species, on the contrary, benefited from the flood.
The vegetation evidently is well adapted to flooding.
ANI
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