Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective

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Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective. / Bakker, Elisabeth S.; Wood, Kevin A.; Pages Fauria, Jordi et al.
In: Aquatic Botany, Vol. 135, 01.11.2016, p. 18-36.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Bakker, ES, Wood, KA, Pages Fauria, J, (Ciska) Veen, GF, Christianen, MJA, Santamaria, L, Nolet, BA & Hilt, S 2016, 'Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective', Aquatic Botany, vol. 135, pp. 18-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

APA

Bakker, E. S., Wood, K. A., Pages Fauria, J., (Ciska) Veen, G. F., Christianen, M. J. A., Santamaria, L., Nolet, B. A., & Hilt, S. (2016). Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective. Aquatic Botany, 135, 18-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

CBE

Bakker ES, Wood KA, Pages Fauria J, (Ciska) Veen GF, Christianen MJA, Santamaria L, Nolet BA, Hilt S. 2016. Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective. Aquatic Botany. 135:18-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Bakker ES, Wood KA, Pages Fauria J, (Ciska) Veen GF, Christianen MJA, Santamaria L et al. Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes: A review and perspective. Aquatic Botany. 2016 Nov 1;135:18-36. Epub 2016 Apr 29. doi: 10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

Author

Bakker, Elisabeth S. ; Wood, Kevin A. ; Pages Fauria, Jordi et al. / Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes : A review and perspective. In: Aquatic Botany. 2016 ; Vol. 135. pp. 18-36.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Herbivory on freshwater and marine macrophytes

T2 - A review and perspective

AU - Bakker, Elisabeth S.

AU - Wood, Kevin A.

AU - Pages Fauria, Jordi

AU - (Ciska) Veen, G.F.

AU - Christianen, Marjolin J.A.

AU - Santamaria, Luis

AU - Nolet, Bart A.

AU - Hilt, Sabine

N1 - Welsh Government and Higher Education Funding Council for Wales through the Sêr Cymru National Research Network for Low Carbon, Energy and Environment.

PY - 2016/11/1

Y1 - 2016/11/1

N2 - Until the 1990s, herbivory on aquatic vascular plants was considered to be of minor importance, and the predominant view was that freshwater and marine macrophytes did not take part in the food web: their primary fate was the detritivorous pathway. In the last 25 years, a substantial body of evidence has developed that shows that herbivory is an important factor in the ecology of vascular macrophytes across freshwater and marine habitats. Herbivores remove on average 40–48% of plant biomass in freshwater and marine ecosystems, which is typically 5–10 times greater than reported for terrestrial ecosystems. This may be explained by the lower C:N stoichiometry found in submerged plants. Herbivores affect plant abundance and species composition by grazing and bioturbation and therewith alter the functioning of aquatic ecosystems, including biogeochemical cycling, carbon stocks and primary production, transport of nutrients and propagules across ecosystem boundaries, habitat for other organisms and the level of shoreline protection by macrophyte beds.With ongoing global environmental change, herbivore impacts are predicted to increase. There are pressing needs to improve our management of undesirable herbivore impacts on macrophytes (e.g. leading to an ecosystem collapse), and the conflicts between people associated with the impacts of charismatic mega-herbivores. While simultaneously, the long-term future of maintaining both viable herbivore populations and plant beds should be addressed, as both belong in complete ecosystems and have co-evolved in these long before the increasing influence of man. Better integration of the freshwater, marine, and terrestrial herbivory literatures would greatly benefit future research efforts.

AB - Until the 1990s, herbivory on aquatic vascular plants was considered to be of minor importance, and the predominant view was that freshwater and marine macrophytes did not take part in the food web: their primary fate was the detritivorous pathway. In the last 25 years, a substantial body of evidence has developed that shows that herbivory is an important factor in the ecology of vascular macrophytes across freshwater and marine habitats. Herbivores remove on average 40–48% of plant biomass in freshwater and marine ecosystems, which is typically 5–10 times greater than reported for terrestrial ecosystems. This may be explained by the lower C:N stoichiometry found in submerged plants. Herbivores affect plant abundance and species composition by grazing and bioturbation and therewith alter the functioning of aquatic ecosystems, including biogeochemical cycling, carbon stocks and primary production, transport of nutrients and propagules across ecosystem boundaries, habitat for other organisms and the level of shoreline protection by macrophyte beds.With ongoing global environmental change, herbivore impacts are predicted to increase. There are pressing needs to improve our management of undesirable herbivore impacts on macrophytes (e.g. leading to an ecosystem collapse), and the conflicts between people associated with the impacts of charismatic mega-herbivores. While simultaneously, the long-term future of maintaining both viable herbivore populations and plant beds should be addressed, as both belong in complete ecosystems and have co-evolved in these long before the increasing influence of man. Better integration of the freshwater, marine, and terrestrial herbivory literatures would greatly benefit future research efforts.

U2 - 10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

DO - 10.1016/j.aquabot.2016.04.008

M3 - Article

VL - 135

SP - 18

EP - 36

JO - Aquatic Botany

JF - Aquatic Botany

SN - 0304-3770

ER -