Unlikely nomads: Settlement, establishment, and dislodgement processes of vegetative seagrass fragments

Samantha Lai, Siti Maryam Yaakub*, Tricia S.M. Poh, Tjeerd J. Bouma, Peter A. Todd

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The dispersal of seagrasses is important to promoting the resilience and long-term survival of populations. Most of the research on long-distance dispersal to date has focused on sexual propagules while the dispersal of vegetative fragments has been largely overlooked, despite the important role this mechanism might play. In this study, we proposed a conceptual model that categorizes vegetative fragment dispersal into seven fundamental steps: i.e., (i) fragment formation, (ii) transport, (iii) decay, (iv) substrate contact, (v) settlement, (vi) establishment, and (vii) dislodgement. We present two experiments focusing on the final steps of the model from substrate contact to dislodgement in four tropical seagrass species (Cymodocea rotundata, Halophila ovalis, Halodule uninervis, and Thalassia hemprichii), which are critical for dispersed vegetative fragments to colonize new areas. We first conducted a mesocosm experiment to investigate the effect of fragment age and species on settlement (i.e., remains on the substrate in a rising tide) and subsequently establishment (i.e., rooting in substrate) rates. To determine dislodgement resistance of settled fragments, we also subjected fragments under different burial treatments to wave and currents in a flume. We found that both initial settlement and subsequent establishment rates increased with fragment age. H. ovalis was the only species that successfully established within the study period. After settlement, dislodgement resistance depended primarily on burial conditions. Smaller species H. ovalis and H. uninervis were also able to settle more successfully, and withstand higher bed shear stress before being dislodged, compared to the larger species T. hemprichii and C. rotundata. However, the ordinal logistic regressions did not reveal relationships between the tested plant morphometrics and the energy needed for dislodgement (with the exception of C. rotundata), indicating that there are potentially some untested species-specific traits that enable certain species to withstand dislodgement better. We discuss the implication our findings have on the dispersal potential for different species and the conservation of seagrasses. This study represents the first effort toward generating parameters for a bio-physical model to predict vegetative fragment dispersal.

Original languageEnglish
Article number160
JournalFrontiers in Plant Science
Volume9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Feb 2018

Funding

This research was funded by National Parks Board (Singapore) Coastal and Marine Environments (CME) research grant number R-154-000-670-490. We would like to thank NParks for providing permits for the surveys (NP/RP16-011) and the P. Ubin site managers for facilitating access to Chek Jawa. We would like to acknowledge the St. John’s Island National Marine Laboratory (SJINML) for providing the facility necessary for conducting the mesocosm experiment. The Laboratory is a National Research Infrastructure under the National Research Foundation Singapore. Thank you to Stanley Chuah from DHI for helping with the extraction of hydrodynamic information around the Singapore Straits. Special thanks to the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ) in Yerseke, for the use of their flume mesocosm, and a heartfelt thank you to the staff at the NIOZ-Yerseke, especially Bert Sinke, Jeroen van Dalen, Lennart van IJzerloo, and Zhu Zhenzhang for their help in the preparation and set up of the flume mesocosm, and for lending a hand when we needed help troubleshooting.

Keywords

  • Asexual recruitment
  • Connectivity
  • Dispersal
  • Flume
  • Movement ecology

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