Diane De Steven,1,2 Rebecca R. Sharitz,3
Julian H. Singer,3 and Christopher D. Barton4
Abstract
Restoration of coastal plain depressions, a biologically significant
and threatened wetland type of the southeastern United States, has received
little systematic research. Within the context of an experimental project
designed to evaluate several restoration approaches, we tested whether
successful revegetation can be achieved by passive methods (recruitment
from seed banks or seed dispersal) that allow for wetland ‘‘self-design’’
in response to hydrologic recovery. For 16 forested depressions that
historically had been drained and altered, drainage ditches were plugged
to reestablish natural ponding regimes, and the successional forest
was harvested to open the sites and promote establishment of emergent
wetland vegetation. We sampled seed bank and vegetation composition
1 year before restoration and monitored vegetation response for 3 years
after. Following forest removal and ditch plugging, the restored wetlands
quickly developed a dense cover of herbaceous plant species, of which
roughly half were wetland species. Seed banks were a major source of
wetland species for early revegetation. However, hydrologic recovery
was slowed by a prolonged drought, which allowed nonwetland plant species
to establish from seed banks and dispersal or to regrow after site harvest.
Some nonwetland species were later suppressed by ponded conditions in
the third year, but resprouting woody plants persisted and could alter
the future trajectory of revegetation. Some characteristic wetland species
were largely absent in the restored sites, indicating that passive methods
may not fully replicate the composition of reference systems. Passive
revegetation was partially successful, but regional droughts present
inherent challenges to restoring depressional wetlands whose hydrologic
regimes are strongly controlled by rainfall variability.
Key
words
Carolina bays, depression wetlands, drought effects, isolated
wetlands, revegetation, seed banks, wetland restoration.
1USDA
Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Center for Bottomland Hardwoods
Research, PO Box 227, Stoneville, MS 38776, U.S.A.
2Address correspondence to D. De Steven, email ddesteven@fs.fed.us
3Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia,
Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802, U.S.A.
4Department of Forestry, University of Kentucky, Lexington,
KY 40546, U.S.A.
SREL
Reprint #2977