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Ecological factors influencing growth of the endangered Hawaiian fern Marsilea villosa (Marsileaceae) and implications for conservation management
Author(s) -
Chau Marian M.,
Reyes Whitney R.,
Ranker Tom A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.3732/ajb.1200625
Subject(s) - villosa , biology , endangered species , ecology , canopy , botany , habitat
• Premise of the Study: Conserving endangered plants is a complex task, and practitioners must often use a “triage” approach, addressing only immediate needs. Ecologists can improve this process by conducting sound science upon which to base management. Marsilea villosa is an endangered, endemic Hawaiian fern with seven remaining populations in ephemerally flooding drylands. Among its uncommon traits are long‐lived sporocarps, requiring flood and drought to complete its sexual life cycle, and extensive vegetative growth. • Methods: We conducted a 3‐yr ecological field study, measuring percent cover of M. villosa and associated species, flooding depth, and canopy cover, to identify ecological factors with the greatest impact on M. villosa growth. • Key Results: Maximum flooding depth and canopy cover had strong positive relationships with M. villosa growth, and all plots with >50% threshold of either variable reached 100% cover of M. villosa by the end of the study. Interaction effects explained nuances of these relationships, including synergy between the two variables. Percent cover of nonnative functional groups (graminoids and nongraminoids) each had negative relationships with M. villosa growth, but interactions showed that nongraminoid cover was driven by particular species, and that time since flooding had greater influence on M. villosa growth than graminoid cover. • Conclusions: We recommend planting reintroduced populations in flood‐prone areas with moderate shade, experimental outplanting of native plants with M. villosa , and management of graminoids as a functional group, while nongraminoid management should be species‐specific. These practices will promote self‐sustaining populations and reduce the need for labor‐intensive management.

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