Published October 26, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Saltmarsh vegetation and secured woody debris facilitate mangrove re-colonization

  • 1. Kasetsart University
  • 2. Technical University of Munich
  • 3. Technische Universität Dresden

Description

Does the presence of saltmarsh vegetation affect the long-term regeneration of the pioneer mangrove species Avicennia germinans in a degraded dwarf forest? Does immobilized coarse woody debris (CWD) affect regeneration similarly? Do larger trees suppress or facilitate intraspecific saplings? The study was conducted in a dwarf mangrove forest in the high intertidal zone on Bragança peninsula in northern Brazil. The spatial patterns of A. germinans, the herbaceous halophyte Sesuvium portulacastrum, and CWD were mapped in three sample plots (each 400 m2) during two consecutive vegetation surveys, conducted in 2011 and 2014. Inhomogeneous Poisson and Thomas point-process models were used to assess the distribution of A. germinans life-history stages (seedlings, saplings, and adult dwarf trees), conditioned on the presence of S. portulacastrum and CWD. In addition, intraspecific interactions between trees and regeneration were assessed based on crown projection mapping. Bivariate point pattern analyses were used to assess the dependence of advance regeneration on dwarf A. germinans trees and S. portulacastrum. A. germinans saplings and trees were positively associated with S. portulacastrum and CWD, whereas seedlings were located around tree crowns. The density of fruit-bearing trees was positively associated with sapling density, indicating that regeneration relied on locally dispersed propagules. Herbaceous vegetation and CWD have an important ecological function in degraded mangroves by retaining tidally dispersed propagules. Here, we show that herbaceous vegetation does not suppress the growth of seedlings but facilitates mangrove recolonization. Due to limited tidal dispersal, regeneration relies on local propagule supply. In addition to hydrological restoration, the observed vegetation patterns suggest that, in the absence of propagule-retaining vegetation, restoration of high-intertidal mangroves can be facilitated by establishing nuclei of planted trees and installing secured logs.

Notes

File 1: Stem coordinates (cm) of A. germinans individuals of different life-history stages in three sample plots (2000 cm x 2000 cm) File 2: Cell center coordinates (cm) of S. portulacastrum patches with a size of 10 cm x 10 cm each within three sample plots File 3: Endpoint coordinates (cm) of straight coarse woody debris segments within three sample plots File 4: Canopy height raster cells of three sample plots File 5: Extent of tree crowns in eight cardinal directions (cm) around stem coordinates in three sample plots with additional height (cm) and presence of fruits (y - yes, n - no) File 6: Stem coordinates (cm), height (cm), and number of internodes of saplings measured in 2014 in three sample plots Time of data collection: January to March 2011 and January to March 2014

Files

File1_Agerminans_stem_coordinates.csv

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Additional details

Funding

CREC – Coastal Research Network On Environmental Changes 247514
European Commission