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Effects of sediment load on emergence of aquatic invertebrates and plants from wetland soil egg and seed banks

January 1, 2003

Intensive agricultural activities near prairie wetlands may result in excessive sediment loads, which may bury seed and invertebrate egg banks that are important for maintenance and cycling of biotic communities during wet/dry cycles. Sediment-load experiments indicated that burial depths of 0.5 cm caused a 91.7% reduction in total seedling emergence and a 99.7% reduction in total invertebrate emergence. These results suggest sediment entering wetlands from agricultural erosion may hamper successional changes throughout interannual climate cycles.

Publication Year 2003
Title Effects of sediment load on emergence of aquatic invertebrates and plants from wetland soil egg and seed banks
Authors R.A. Gleason, N.H. Euliss, D.E. Hubbard, W.G. Duffy
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Wetlands
Index ID 1001774
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center