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Temporal changes in wetland landscapes of a section of the St. Lawrence River,Canada
Authors:Martin Jean  André Bouchard
Affiliation:(1) Institut botanique, Université de Montréal, 4101 rue Sherbrooke est, H1X 2B2 Montréal, Québec, Canada;(2) Institut botanique, Université de Montréal and Jardin botanique de la ville de Montréal, 4101 rue Sherbrooke est, H1X 2B2 Montréal, Québec, Canada
Abstract:Historical aerial photographs (from 1946 through 1983) were used to study and describe the nature and extent of changes in wetland vegetation of a section of the St. Lawrence River and to evaluate the relative importance of water level, fire, and vegetational development as causal factors of these historical changes. Data were encoded and analyzed using a geographical information system, autocorrelation, and Mantel tests. Results show three temporal patterns in wetland dynamics. First, some wetland zones have been reduced by human activities (urbanization, landfilling, canal dredging). The second group consists of wetland areas that remain stable and do not change over time. They are generally protected sites artificially maintained by water-level control. A third situation has occurred in the Lake Saint-François National Wildlife Area, where no significant wetland losses were detected, but where landscape structure has changed greatly. Modeling with Mantel tests suggests that, in the latter case, these changes in wetland landscape are related to the suppression of burning (fires set deliberately by Indians) since the purchase of the territory by the Canadian federal government. This situation has caused rapid replacement of wet meadows byAlnus rugosa scrub and a possible decline in habitat diversity.
Keywords:Wetland dynamics  Water level  Fire  Modeling  Mantel tests  St. Lawrence River
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