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IBBR publication #820

Hydro-hygrophilous vegetation diversity and distribution patterns in riverine wetlands in an agricultural landscape: a case study from the Oglio River (Po plain, Northern Italy)

Bolpagni R, Piotti A

Phytocoenologia (in press) [ISSN: 0340-269X] (2015)

In the European plains, up to 80 % of riverine wetlands have been lost due to alteration of hydrological regime and catchment exploitation, a condition that can be further negatively exacerbated by climate change. To help enrich the information available on the loss of diversity and change in distribution patterns of hydro-hygrophilous vegetation in temperate and Mediterranean floodplains, a vegetation survey was conducted within the lower Oglio River reach, a mid-size, altered and nutrient-rich left tributary of the Po River (Northern Italy). During the 2008 growing season, a total of 60 marginal aquatic habitats were investigated. Overall, 37 vegetation communities were detected, showing a clear predominance of hygrophilous herbaceous plant communities both in terms of representativeness (55.1 %) and diversity (54.1 %) with respect to shrub and woody (22.9 % and 10.8 %, respectively), and obligate aquatic vegetations (22.0 % and 35.1 %, respectively). Our main findings were (i) the widespread presence of highly opportunistic, non-native and invasive hygrophilous plant communities (largely dominated by Amorpha fruticosa, Phragmites australis s.l., Amaranthus spp., Bidens spp., and Cyperus spp.), and (ii) the limited distribution of hydrophyte vegetation usually dominated by pleustophytes (e.g. Spirodela polyrhiza and Lemna spp.). The present study confirms the dominance of secondary plant communities characterized by the widespread presence of alien species in lowland over-exploited riverscapes, coupled with a low local representativeness of native willow (Salix alba, S. cinerea) communities and anchored macrophyte (batrachid, ceratophyllid, elodeid, myriophyllid) meadows. Total vegetation diversity is consistent with data collected in similar ecological contexts; on the other hand, at site scale the diversity values recorded results extremely low. This is especially true for the aquatic vegetation, and can be related to the high water turbidity and chlorophyll-a concentrations that prevent the establishment and colonization of submerged and rooted hydrophytes. Consequently, we stress the need for metabolic and biogeochemical indicators to assess the actual trophic status of lowland wetlands in order to clarify their potential to be restored

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