Landscape-scale analysis of aquatic vegetation response to treatment in terms of growth rates, persistence, community composition, and biodiversity in the Delta
Description / purpose
The California Department of Parks and Recreation, Division of Boating and Waterways (DBW) operates a control program for both floating and submerged IAV. This project is an IEP Synthesis effort that will integrate a historical and ongoing dataset of the Delta IAV coverage and DBW IAV treatment records for the past 14 years. This study seeks to determine if treatment efficacy differs across space (e.g., different habitat types) and time. It will assess the impact of IAV control effort on the distribution, growth rate, spread and persistence, and species richness and community composition of the IAV communities. Gaining such understanding on the relationship between IAV treatment and IAV distribution, coverage, and species composition is an urgent management issue for the Delta, given the sharp rise in coverage of IAV from 9000 acres in 2004 to 12,500 acres in 2014 and its likely impact on the shallow-water habitat.
The objectives of this study are:
1. What are the rates and patterns of spread for floating IAV? Do the rates of spread into water or marsh differ? Where do these floating IAV persist and what mechanisms can be linked to their ability of persistence? If there are specific locations that promote persistence, for example over-wintering nurseries, could they be targeted for removal?
2. Has treatment for both water primrose and water hyacinth been successful in reducing species cover over the last 15 years? If so, was treatment effective in reducing density, reducing growth rates, slowing down expansion, and therefore changing distribution of target species? Does treatment efficacy change over different habitats and through time?
3. Does herbicide control of target submerged IAV species reduce density, growth rates, slow down expansion and persistence, and change submerged community composition towards native species? Does treatment efficacy change over different habitats and through time? Does it change the patch size and distribution?
Linked science activities
| ID | Title |
|---|---|
| #54720 | Field data collection and mapping of aquatic vegetation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh from 2022-2027 → |
Collaborators
Activity status
- 1 Awarded / Initiating (2018)
- 2 In progress / Ongoing
- 3 Complete
Funding summary
Total allocated funding: $0