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Plant Diversity - Mangroves
Mangroves are what we call the collection of salt
tolerant plants that are found along coastal areas and up rivers
in the tropics and subtropics. There are 34 species of mangroves
in Queensland with a total of only 69 species worldwide. Boardwalks
have been installed at several locations in the Wet Tropics area
and this makes a wander through the mangrove forest enjoyable and
easy - but don't forget your insect repellent!
These salt tolerant plants have adapted for where
they live. Each high tide, the sea floods their roots and trunks.
The mangroves have a number of different systems to handle all this
salt:
- their roots can prevent its absorption by filtering
it out
- they can concentrate the salt in older leaves
which fall off, taking their accumulated salt with them
- some species have salt glands which actually
excrete the salt onto the surface of the leaves where it is washed
away by the rain.
Some species of mangroves are more salt tolerant
than others and, because of this, there are distinct zones in a
mangrove forest where the boundaries between species can easily
be seen. The less salt tolerant trees are actually on the seaward
side as they will be frequently washed by seawater. Salt pans are
uncommon in the Wet Tropics but can be found in extremely saline
situations. Salt meadows of salt tolerant grasses and fleshy herbs
occur in small patches among mangroves on higher and drier areas
inundated only by king tides. Small depressions form salt scalds
after the sea water evaporates. Salt pans, salt meadows and salt
scalds are more extensive in the drier northern and southern extremities
of the Wet Tropics.
Mangroves actually enhance their own environment,
in a way. The root systems are designed to trap silt - the more
silt builds up, the more mangroves can grow, and trap more silt
and make more muddy areas for more mangroves. But mangroves have
had to adapt to all this mud. In terrestrial plants, the soil gets
soaked from rain and then dries out, allowing air to reach the roots.
This doesn't happen with mangroves as there is little to no oxygen
available in the heavy mud, so these plants have adapted their roots
to be able to get oxygen without extracting it from the mud. Their
roots grow up out of the mud so that oxygen is accessed straight
from the air. Many of the root types are distinctive to the species
of mangrove so the plant's genus can be identified sometimes by
the root type alone.
Some common root types (the roots that grow up out of the mud are
called pneumatophores) are:
Reproduction
Mangrove reproduction has also adapted to be successful
in a salt water environment. All mangroves flower but some don't
produce seeds which fall off like other plants but rather 'live
plants'.
The
fertilised seed develops into a seedling while still attached to
the flower. The seedling is merely a long, cigar shaped 'stem' (called
a propagule) and this grows for up to a year on the tree before
it is ready to find a place of its own to grow. When it reaches
about 20 cm (8 inches), depending on the species, it drops off and
is carried by the tide. These seedlings are often washed up onto
tropical beaches. If the seedling gets carried into brackish water
shallows (part fresh, part salt water) and is lodged into a muddy
bottom, roots are quickly sent out to take hold in the soil and
the stem grows upward and produces leaves.
Of course, other species of mangrove do produce
seeds which drop off and float in the water until they reach a brackish
water area and their seed coat breaks away, allowing the seed to
start a shoot.
The mangrove forest provides shelter and food for a wide range of
animals, especially invertebrates and juvenile marine species. For
example:
- the algae that collects on the surface of aerial
roots (pneumatophores) is food for snails and crustaceans
- the leaves that drop off the trees are taken
into crab burrows to stimulate the growth of algae eaten by the
crabs
- the flooded roots provide protection for juvenile
fish, especially Great Barrier Reef species and commercial fish
- the snails and juvenile fish are food for wading
and water birds
- the lack of large, wandering animals creates
a sheltered area for a myriad of spiders and flying-foxes
- the mud is the perfect medium to create burrows
in for crabs and snapping shrimp
- the trunks and roots which are regularly submerged
by tides are a good place for bivalves (such as oysters and mussels)
to attach
Mangroves are a living buffer between the land
and the sea. The dense silt amassed by their root systems prevents
erosion from their landward side while it also minimises erosion
from wave activity on the seaward side. The forest itself bears
the brunt of storm activity, allowing the coast behind it to remain
protected.
So the next time you
see a stretch of mangroves and think that they are boring - take
a closer look. There's lots of life in there!
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