In 2004, Hurricane Ivan brought high winds uprooting trees and altering canopy cover along the gulf coast. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina produced a strong storm surge altering soil salinity. Decreased canopy coverage and higher salinity levels may have altered plant distribution at Weeks Bay Estuarine Research Reserve in
Results/Conclusions
Wax myrtle SLW was about 100 g/m2 for all sites; however, SLW of sawgrass decreased significantly from 225 g/m2 to 150 g/m2 between the freshwater and dense ecotone sites. Groundsel bush displayed lower midday xylem water potential than wax myrtle across all sites although SLW did not vary significantly across all sites suggesting that it is able to sustain lower midday water potential without limiting leaf area for photosynthesis, but may require higher light levels. Groundsel bush stomatal conductance was somewhat higher than wax myrtle across all sites. Sawgrass xylem water potential was always more negative than all other species across all sites, and stomatal conductance was usually lower than the other two co-occurring species. This suggests that light limitation, not water limitation may exclude sawgrass from forested areas. Xylem density and vessel wall to lumen ratios did not differ between groundsel bush and wax myrtle across or within sites. These results may provide a glimpse of the future community structure of gulf coast wetlands since increasing sea levels will change salinity gradients resulting in canopy changes that favor a different species assemblage.