首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Development, maintenance and role of riparian vegetation in the river landscape
Authors:Eric Tabacchi  David L. Correll  Richard Hauer  Gilles Pinay  Anne-Marie Planty-Tabacchi  Robert C. Wissmar
Affiliation:Centre d'Ecologie des Systemes Aquatiques Continentaux, UMR C5576, 29, rue Jeanne Marvig, 31055 Cedex 04, France; Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, PO Box 28, Edgewater, MD 21037, U.S.A.; Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana, Polson, MO 59860, U.S.A.; UMR 6553 ECOBIO, Universitéde Rennes I, Campus de Beaulieu, Batiment 14, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France; Centre d'Ecologie des Systemes Aquatiques Continentaux, UMR C5576, 29, rue Jeanne Marvig, 31055 Cedex 04, France; College of Ocean and Fisheries Sciences, University of Washington, PO Box 357980, Seattle, WA 98195, U.S.A.
Abstract:1. Riparian structure and function were considered from a longitudinal perspective in order to identify multiscale couplings with adjacent ecosystems and to identify research needs. 2. We characterized functional zones (with respect to vegetation development in association with various biogeochemical processes) within geomorphological settings using a delineation based upon erosional, transitional and depositional properties. 3. Vegetation dynamics within the riparian corridor are clearly influenced substantially by hydrological disturbance regimes. In turn, we suggest that vegetation productivity and diversity may widely influence riverine biogeochemical processes, especially as related to the consequences of changing redox conditions occurring from upstream to downstream. 4. However, surface and groundwater linkages are the predominant controls of landscape connectivity within riparian systems. 5. The importance of riparian zones as sources and sinks of matter and energy was examined in context of structural and functional attributes, such as sequestering or cycling of nutrients in sediments, retention of water in vegetation, and retention, diffusion or dispersal of biota. 6. The consequences of interactions between different communities (e.g. animals and plants, micro-organisms and plants) on biogeochemical processes are notably in need of research, especially with respect to control of landscape features. Multiscale approaches, coupling regional and local factors in all three spatial dimensions, are needed in order to understand more synthetically and to model biogeochemical and community processes within the river-riparian-upland landscape of catchments.
Keywords:riparian zone    plant ecology    rivers    streams    ecosystems    groundwater
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号