Abstract
Numerous studies early stages to subsequent large-scale, plant-community changes. The invasion of Phraginites australis (common reed) into the Great Lakes region is a recent phenomenon, facilitated by a decline in water lake levels. The spread of R australis was tracked in the Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve, a 60-ha Lake Erie coastal wetland, using a combination of low-altitude aerial photography and ground surveys during the period from 1993 to 2005. Since the late 1990s, the Old Woman Creek wetland has shifted from a predominantly open-water system to a shallow, water-emergent system. This shift has coincided with a decline in Lake Erie water levels, which are now closer to the long-term mean water level. Aerial photographs for the period 1993-2005 show a transition from the floating leaf Nelumbo lutea (American lotus), to a mixed-emergent community, to increasingly large monotypic beds of P. australis. This wetland perennial grass currently occupies about 22% of the lower wetland and is also a significant component of the emergent community that covers approximately 30% of the lower wetland. The emergent community and P. australis comprised less than 1% of the wetland area in 1993.
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CITATION STYLE
Whyte, R. S., Trexel-Kroll, D., Klarer, D. M., Shields, R., & Francko, D. A. (2008). The Invasion and Spread of Phragmites australis during a Period of Low Water in a Lake Erie Coastal Wetland. Journal of Coastal Research, 10055, 111–120. https://doi.org/10.2112/si55-19.1
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