Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T20:18:25.349Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Simulated mechanical control of Nitellopsis obtusa under mesocosm conditions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 July 2023

Alyssa M. Haram
Affiliation:
Graduate Research Assistant, Department of Biological Sciences, Minnesota State University, Mankato, Mankato, MN, USA
Ryan M. Wersal*
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, Minnesota State University, Mankato, Mankato, MN, USA
*
Corresponding author: Ryan M. Wersal; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Management efforts to control starry stonewort [Nitellopsis obtusa (Desvaux in Loiseleur) J. Groves] have been limited to stressing the thalli and have not been able to directly target the reproductive bulbils. Smaller-scale efforts such as the use of hand pulling can be employed, but hand pulling is not realistic for larger infestations. This research was conducted to test the effects of clipping stress on N. obtusa to provide a baseline for the effect of stress on the production of bulbils and the regrowth of thalli. Mesocosms were set up under greenhouse conditions to test the effects on N. obtusa of simulated mechanical harvesting once, twice, and four times per growing season. Different seasonal timing and frequency of clipping treatments will remove different amounts of thalli biomass. The four-clipping treatment always reduced thalli biomass in this study at both 16 and 52 wk after treatment (WAT) compared with the nontreated reference, but there was no difference among clipping treatments at 52 WAT. At 16 WAT, one clipping reduced bulbil density by 44% (Trial 1) to 50% (Trial 2), two clippings reduced bulbil density by 28% (Trial 2) to 52% (Trial 1), and four clippings reduced bulbil density by 22% (Trial 2) to 88% (Trial 1). At 52 WAT, bulbil densities were 69% and 93% lower than those of the nontreated reference Trials 2 and 1, respectively. Results from this study indicate that clipping may be effective for N. obtusa control and could impact bulbil production.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection within the United States. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Weed Science Society of America.
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© Minnesota State University, Mankato, 2023

Management Implications

Seasonal timing and clipping frequency will impact the amount of Nitellopsis obtusa (starry stonewort) biomass that is harvested during each clipping event. Based on this small-scale, greenhouse trial, mechanical clipping may offer longer-term control of N. obtusa in areas that can be clipped at least four times per growing season. However, harvesting is generally a slow process, as a regular harvester can cut and remove plants at a rate of about 0.4 to 1.6 ha d−1 depending on the machine and plant density. Therefore, harvesting an entire 300-ha littoral zone infestation would take anywhere from 202 to 810 d. Smaller high-traffic areas or lake access points that would allow for repeated clippings would likely have the greatest chance of success, especially at reducing bulbil production, based on this trial. One clipping per growing season should only be used as an option for immediate nuisance relief. Clipping integrated with other management tactics is recommended to maximize stress of N. obtusa thalli production and to reduce the bulbil bank. Further research should be done to test the response of N. obtusa growth to harvesting treatments done in a field setting to account for variables that could not be captured in this study.

Introduction

Starry stonewort [Nitellopsis obtusa (Desvaux in Loiseleur) J. Groves] is a problematic macroalga, because it creates recreational and ecological issues by forming dense mats of vegetation that fill all available optimal and nonoptimal growth habitats (Pokrzywinski et al. Reference Pokrzywinski, Getsinger, Steckart and Midwood2020; Pullman and Crawford Reference Pullman and Crawford2010). The growth of N. obtusa might negatively impact native fish populations, because its growth pattern may inhibit spawning, although further research is needed to confirm this (Kipp et al. Reference Kipp, McCarthy and Fusaro2014; Pullman and Crawford Reference Pullman and Crawford2010; Sleith et al. Reference Sleith, Havens, Stewart and Karol2015). Lakes with dense infestations may be at risk of oxygen depletion in the autumn, as large mats of N. obtusa senesce and decompose (Brainard and Schulz Reference Brainard and Schulz2017; Kipp et al. Reference Kipp, McCarthy and Fusaro2014), which could also be detrimental to fish populations. The thalli of N. obtusa also outcompete native vegetation by physically excluding them from plant beds and have even been shown to outcompete other invasive species such as Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum L.) (Ginn et al. Reference Ginn, Dias and Fleischaker2021; Kipp et al. Reference Kipp, McCarthy and Fusaro2014; Pullman and Crawford Reference Pullman and Crawford2010; Sleith et al. Reference Sleith, Havens, Stewart and Karol2015). The mats of N. obtusa have also been shown to reduce invertebrate diversity in the water column, disrupting the bottom chain of the food web (Harrow-Lyle and Kirkwood Reference Harrow-Lyle and Kirkwood2021).

Nitellopsis obtusa can grow from the sediment to 30 to 120 cm in the water column (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). “Thalli” is the term for the aboveground biomass of N. obtusa. The thallus is made up of a single strand of cells attached end to end and is about 0.7 to 2 mm in diameter (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). Branchlets form from the main stem at the nodes in whorls of five to eight branchlets, with each branchlet consisting of two to three segments with a total length up to 9 cm (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). Nitellopsis obtusa produces vegetative propagules called bulbils that are white star-shaped stuctures that form under the sediment on rhizoid nodes (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). The rhizoids are filamentous strands of clear biomass that grow underneath the sediment (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). In North America, bulbils and fragmentation are the predominant form of spread for N. obtusa (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018). Current management techniques for N. obtusa are unable to effectively manage vegetative spread.

To date, management strategies for N. obtusa include mechanical control, which is either hand pulling, driver-assisted suction harvesting (Pokrzywinski et al. Reference Pokrzywinski, Getsinger, Steckart and Midwood2020; B Steckart, personal communication, September 7, 2018), or mechanical harvesting (Pokrzywinski et al. Reference Pokrzywinski, Getsinger, Steckart and Midwood2020); and chemical control, which is the application of either copper-based algaecides or the herbicides diquat and/or endothall (Carver and Wersal Reference Carver and Wersal2022; Glisson et al. Reference Glisson, Wagner, McComas, Farnum, Verhoeven, Muthukrishnan and Larkin2018; Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018; Pokrzywinski et al. Reference Pokrzywinski, Getsinger, Steckart and Midwood2020; Wersal Reference Wersal2022). Chemical control is effective at reducing thalli biomass but is unable to reliably and consistently reach belowground structures such as rhizoids or bulbils (Carver and Wersal Reference Carver and Wersal2022). Water-level drawdowns are one method proposed for N. obtusa management, but are not applicable to many midwestern glacial lakes that do not have water-level control structures (Larkin et al. Reference Larkin, Monfils, Boissezon, Sleith, Skawinski, Welling, Cahill and Karol2018; Menninger Reference Menninger2011).

A combined treatment of algaecide and mechanical pulling decreased N. obtusa bulbil density in Lake Koronis (Glisson et al. Reference Glisson, Wagner, McComas, Farnum, Verhoeven, Muthukrishnan and Larkin2018). Similarly, a mechanical groomer system reduced N. obtusa biomass in the treated areas (Brandt Reference Brandt2017). Although previous mechanical control methods have been used on N. obtusa, none have quanitified effectiveness or how often these methods are needed to be implemented in a season to produce specific results (Glisson et al. Reference Glisson, Wagner, McComas, Farnum, Verhoeven, Muthukrishnan and Larkin2018). Because N. obtusa has been difficult to manage under field conditions with both pesticides and mechanical control techniques, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of simulated harvesting on N. obtusa under mesocosm conditions. It is possible that N. obtusa will have a limit to the amount of cutting stress it can handle before regrowth and/or bulbil production is inhibited. In other harvesting studies, plants that were repeatedly clipped produced less biomass and fewer vegetative reproductive structures (Fox et al. Reference Fox, Haller and Cuda2002; Turnage et al. Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019).

The objective of the study was to develop clipping frequency recommendations for N. obtusa in the greenhouse. It was hypothesized that repeated clipping of N. obtusa would result in longer-term reduction in thalli biomass and especially a reduction in bulbil density. The overarching goal was to compare the ability of clipping treatments at different time frequencies and seasonal growth so that managers might employ this technique to reduce bulbil density. The goal was not to directly compare absolute reductions in thalli biomass, given that the different clipping regimens varied in their seasonal timing and, by default, would remove different amounts of biomass. Thalli biomass is compared between clipping treatments as a point of reference, however, with the expectation that frequent clippings should reduce biomass more at short- and long-term periods after treatment than less frequent clippings.

Materials and Methods

This study was performed under greenhouse conditions at Minnesota State University, Mankato from August 23, 2021, to October 3, 2022. Nitellopsis obtusa biomass was harvested from historically nontreated plots in Lake Koronis, Stearns County, Minnesota (45.31°N, 94.68°W) and used to establish greenhouse stock cultures. After harvest, N. obtusa was transplanted into 0.473-L plastic containers filled with sediment amended with Osomocote Fertilizer (19-6-12, Scotts-Sierra Horticultural Products, 14111 Scottslawn Road, Marysville, OH 43041) at a rate of 2 g L−1 sediment and topped with sand (creating an average soil surface height of 10 cm). For transplantation of N. obtusa, thalli were wrapped in small balls and placed on top of the sand in each container. The mesocosms were filled with 94.6 L of tap water (52-cm water depth) treated with sodium thiosulfate to remove chlorine (approx. 1:1 ratio of Na2S2O3 to Cl2) and then all mesocosms were covered in shade netting (60% light reduction) to aid in the early stages of growth. Nitellopsis obtusa was grown in either a greenhouse under ambient light conditions or a lab under artificial light using a 12:12 h light:dark cycle. Water temperature in the mesocosms averaged 22 C ± 0.1 SE, and pH was circumneutral. The water was aerated with a compressed-air system to add CO2 to the water column in the mesocosms. All propagation methods were adapted from Wersal (Reference Wersal2022).

Nitellopsis obtusa was allowed to establish for 1.5 mo (or until thalli reached the water surface, approx. 52.5 cm from the soil surface), after which 11 containers of N. obtusa were moved to each treatment mesocosm (for a total of 176 containers per trial). Mesocosms were subjected to an ambient light cycle, aerated with a compressed-air system, and filled with 94.6 L of water (63.5-cm depth) treated with sodium thiosulfate to remove chlorine. Three clipping treatments were applied and compared with a non-treated reference over a 4-mo period. All treatments used four mesocosms (replicates), and the study was repeated twice. Trial 1 was conducted from August 22, 2021 to August 22, 2022; Trial 2 was conducted from October 3, 2021 to October 3, 2022. The treatments were: (1) a nontreated reference; (2) clipping once per growing season; (3) clipping every other month (bimonthly, two clippings total); and (4) clipping every month (four clippings total).

Clipping treatments were timed to mimic when mechanical treatments would be applied in the field. In Minnesota, N. obtusa does not top out in the water column until late June or early August (Carver Reference Carver2022); mechanical treatments to remove thalli biomass would not be applied until the third month of the growing season. To mimic this, the one-clipping treatment was applied in the third month, the two-clipping treatment was applied in the second and fourth months, and the four-clipping treatment was applied every month. Therefore, the initiation of each clipping treatment differed in an attempt to capture the optimal time to harvest in the field.

Treatments were chosen based on previous simulated harvesting trials (Turnage et al Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019) and modified to simulate the rate at which a harvester could reasonably cut in a season. Biomass was clipped approximately 15 cm above the sediment surface. The clipping was chosen to simulate a harvestor cutting depth of 1.8 m (Aquarius Systems 2010). For example, if N. obtusa was growing to a height of 2 m and was clipped, there would be 20 cm of N. obtusa remaining above the sediment.

Pretreatment samples (one container from every mesocosm) were harvested the day before the first clipping. Harvested N. obtusa was seperated into thalli biomass, rhizoid biomass, and bulbil biomass; placed in labeled paper bags; and dried in a forced-air oven at 48 C for at least 48 h to determine biomass (g dry weight [DW] pot−1) for each tissue type. The number of bulbils was recorded before drying. At 16 wk after treatment (WAT), half the containers in each mesocosm were harvested in the same manner as pretreatment samples. The remaining containers in all mesocosms were harvested at 52 WAT. The posttreatment sampling occurred at 16 wk from the first clipping (Trial 1: December 13, 2021; Trial 2: January 24, 2022) and 52 wk from the first clipping (Trial 1: August 22, 2022; Trial 2: October 3, 2022). It is acknowledged that sampling in this manner might result in less biomass being present in the two- and four-clipping treatments compared with the one-clipping treatment, because the multiple-clipping treatments would be clipped closer to the 16 WAT sampling time and would not have the same amount of recovery time as the one-clipping treatment. The 16 WAT and 52 WAT sampling times were chosen to assess the short-term (in-season) and longer-term efficacy of the clipping treatments and followed the sampling frequency of other simulated harvesting studies (Turnage et al. Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019). Additionally, during each harvesting event, clipped biomass was removed from mesocosms to simulate harvester-boat operation in a field setting. Harvested biomass was put into labeled paper bags and dried in a forced-air oven at 48 C for at least 48 h. The mass for each clipping was then weighed to give an estimate of how much biomass was removed during each harvesting event and to determine whether harvesting was offering longer-term reductions in thalli biomass.

Statistical Analysis

To minimize the inherent varibility when working with N. obtusa, the lowest-performing replicate in each treatment was excluded from statistical analysis; therefore, all analyses were done using three replicates for each treatment. A Shapiro-Wilk normality test confirmed that data were not normally distributed for all variables (P < 0.01; Statistix 10 Analytical Software, 2105 Miller Landing Road, Tallahassee, FL 32312). Therefore, a Kruskal-Wallis test was used to test for trial effects and clipping effects on thalli biomass and bulbil density (Statistix 10 Analytical Software). To account for different start times for each clipping treatment, a Kruskal-Wallis test was used to compare treatment differences in the pretreatment biomass. At pretreatment, there was no significant difference between thalli biomass (Trial 1: H = 0.55, P = 0.91; Trial 2: H = 6.09, P = 0.09) or between bulbil density (Trial 1: H = 1.53, P = 0.72; Trial 2 H = 4.41, P = 0.23). Initial clipped biomass harvested from each treatment was also not significantly different (H = 1.61, P = 0.22). There was a difference between trials for thalli biomass and bulbil density at both 16 and 52 WAT, so data were analyzed using a Kruskal-Wallis test within WAT and for each trial. The Dunn’s all-pairwise comparison post hoc test was used to determine differences. All statistical tests were conducted using an α ≤ 0.05 significance level.

Results and Discussion

At 16 WAT, Trial 1 showed a significant difference after two clippings compared with the nontreated reference bulbil density (112 d; H = 32.01, P < 0.01), but Trial 2 showed no significant difference between treatments (H = 1.98, P = 0.58; Figure 1). At 16 WAT, one clipping reduced bulbil density by 44% (Trial 1) to 50% (Trial 2), two clippings reduced bulbil density by 28% (Trial 2) to 52% (Trial 1), and four clippings reduced bulbil density by 22% (Trial 2) to 88% (Trial 1). At 52 WAT, bulbil densities were 69% and 93% lower than that of the nontreated reference for Trials 2 and 1, respectively (Trial 1: H = 29.00, P < 0.01; Trial 2: H = 15.54, P < 0.01; Figure 1). The four-clipping treatment resulted in bulbil densities that were at or below the pretreatment density of 14,568 bulbils m−2 for Trial 1 and 6,083 bulbils m−2 for Trial 2. This is possibly due to the clipping and subsequent harvesting opening the water column to light penetration that induced bulbil sprouting after each clipping.

Figure 1. Mean (± 1 SE) bulbil density (N m−2) for the clipping treatments (0, 1, 2, 4) at 16 and 52 wk after initial treatment (WAT) for both trials. 16 WAT Trial 1: F = 22.57, P < 0.01; 16 WAT Trial 2: F = 0.65, P = 0.59; 52 WAT Trial 1: F = 18.04, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 2: F = 6.67, P < 0.01. Bars sharing the same letter are not different according to a Dunn’s all-pairwise comparison at an α ≤ 0.05 significance level. Dashed line represents mean pretreatment bulbil density (Trial 1 = 14,568 bulbils m−2; Trial 2 = 6,082 bulbils m−2).

Different seasonal timing and frequency of clipping treatments will by default remove different amounts of thalli biomass, and as expected, the four-clipping treatment always reduced thalli biomass in this study at both 16 and 52 WAT compared with the nontreated reference (Figure 1), but there was no difference among clipping treatments at 52 WAT (Figure 2). At 16 WAT, one clipping reduced thalli biomass by 17% (Trial 1) to 85% (Trial 2), two clippings reduced thalli biomass by 52% (Trial 1) to 86% (Trial 2), and four clippings reduced thalli biomass by 82% (Trial 2) to 90% (Trial 1). At 52 WAT, N. obtusa biomass in the one- and two-clipping treatments was still less than biomass in the nontreated reference (Trial 1: H = 39.76, P < 0.01; Trial 2: H = 38.05, P < 0.01; Figure 2). Biomass in all clipping treatments was below pretreatment levels at 52 WAT except in the nontreated references. The duration of the study for both trials included winter months (nonoptimal growth conditions), which influenced the 52 WAT data, in that the combination of clipping and natural senescence caused reduced or no growth during the winter months. This is made evident by both the nontreated reference bulbil density and thalli biomass not increasing through time (Figures 1 and 2). It does illustrate the potential to clip natural populations later in the season to reduce overwintering biomass. Under this scenerio, the N. obtusa population would enter winter stressed by the cutting and possibly die during the winter months. If N. obtusa did survive clipping and then winter conditions, it would enter the next growing season with lower biomass and reduced energy stores, which could impact its seasonal growth paterns and therfore make subsequent management more effective.

Figure 2. Mean (± 1 SE) thalli biomass (g dry weight [DW]) for the clipping treatments (0, 1, 2, 4) at 16 and 52 wk after initial treatment (WAT) for both trials. 16 WAT Trial 1: F = 32.55, P < 0.01; 16 WAT Trial 2: F = 20.16, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 1: F = 36.33, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 2: F = 30.89, P < 0.01). Bars sharing the same letter are not different according to a Dunn’s all-pairwise comparison at an α ≤ 0.05 significance level. Dashed line represents mean pretreatment thalli biomass (Trial 1 = 0.48 g DW; Trial 2 = 0.29 g DW).

Previous research measuring the regrowth after a clipping regime on flowering rush (Butomus umbellatus L.), an invasive aquatic plant in Minnesota lakes, found that biweekly (every 2 wk) clippings consistently reduced aboveground biomass after 52 WAT, while monthly clippings only sometimes had a significant difference from nontreated mesocosms (Turnage et al. Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019). Comparatively, mechanical harvesting is needed less frequently to reduce aboveground biomass for N. obtusa than it is for B. umbellatus. This supports previous work suggesting that a species’ tolerance to mechanical clipping will be determined by the amount of belowground biomass present (Turnage et al. Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019). Mature individuals of giant rush [Juncus ingens (N. A. Wakef.)] were reportedly able to survive clipping stress more often than immature individuals due to the amount of belowground biomass available to promote regrowth (Mayence et al. Reference Mayence, Marshall and Godfree2010; Middleton Reference Middleton1990). Clipping directly targets aboveground biomass, so individuals or species with more belowground biomass may be more tolerant to clipping stresses than those with less belowground biomass. There is much less propagule biomass for N. obtusa bulbils and rhizoids (15.4 g m−2) compared with B. umbellatus rhizome buds (4,000 g m−2), although propagule density for N. obtusa (156,944 N m−2) is much higher than for B. umbellatus (4,800 N m−2; Carver Reference Carver2022; Turnage et al. Reference Turnage, Madsen, Wersal and Byrd2019).

In this greenhouse study, each consecutive clipping removed approximately 30% to 45% of existing biomass (Table 1). Interestingly, it was observed during the four-clipping treatment that N. obtusa started to grow horizontally in the water column beneath the clipping height after the second clipping. It is not certain whether N. obtusa stopped growing out of the top nodes and only grew sideways as a physiological response or if there are other mechanisms that would cause this growth pattern. More research would be needed to test whether an adaptive response exists or the growth was coincidental. Lateral growth in N. obtusa may be a form of morphological plasticity, as has been observed in other macroalgae such as brown algae (Charrier et al. Reference Charrier, Le Bail and de Reviers2012). The plasticity of the brown algae Fucus gardneri (P.C. Silva) allows individuals to change their size, shape, and bendability in response to extreme storm waves that remove individuals from their attachment points (Blanchette Reference Blanchette1997; Charrier et al. Reference Charrier, Le Bail and de Reviers2012; Dudgeon and Johnson Reference Dudgeon and Johnson1992; Koehl Reference Koehl1984; Koehl and Alberte Reference Koehl and Alberte1988). This is also seen in the kelp species Nereocytis luetkeana (K. Mertens), which can change morphology in a span of 4 to 5 d to limit water movement drag (Charrier et al. Reference Charrier, Le Bail and de Reviers2012; Koehl et al. Reference Koehl, Silk, Liang and Mahadevan2008). If lateral growth is an adaptive response of N. obtusa, then resource managers will need to consider this when utilizing repeated clipping as a control mechanism.

Table 1. Average biomass removal of Nitellopsis obtusa after successive clippings. a

a Trials 1 and 2 were combined to calculate biomass removal.

Overall, these data suggest mechanical clipping could be used for longer-term control in areas that can be clipped at least four times per growing season. Clipping four times per growing season was enough to reduce bulbil density and thalli biomass. Populations of N. obtusa may respond differently to clipping in field conditions, where there is more variability in bulbil densities (0 bulbils m−2 to 156,944 bulbils m−2) (Carver Reference Carver2022), suggesting this study should be tested in field sites before clipping is recommended as an operational control technique. A single harvester on average can clip about 0.4 to 1.6 ha d−1; therefore, a harvester can only clip about 48 to 192 ha once per growing season, 24 to 96 ha twice per growing season, and only 12 to 48 ha four times per growing season (Greenfield et al. Reference Greenfield, David, Hunt, Wittmann and Siemering2004).

If clipping is to be implemented as a method to reduce thalli biomass and bulbil density, then it would be most effective in smaller treatment sites such as lake access points, high-traffic areas like boat lanes, or in swimming areas that have small populations of N. obtusa that are near harvester offload points. The timing for mechanical clipping treatments should also be carefully planned to avoid disturbing fish spawning or harming native fish and fauna (Booms Reference Booms1999; Mikol Reference Mikol1985; Wile Reference Wile1978). Harvesting can easily trap invertebrates and fish that get entangled on macrophytes, so it should be applied responsibly to avoid removing too many off-target species (Booms Reference Booms1999). Integrating clipping with other management tactics is recommended to maximize stress on N. obtusa thalli production and reduce the sediment bulbil bank. Further research should be done in a field setting to test the response of N. obtusa growth to harvesting treatments and account for variables that could not be captured in this study.

Acknowledgments

Funding for this research was provided by the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund as recommended by the Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR). For aid in setting up the mesocosm study as well as data collection, sorting, and weighing, thank you to the Weed Science Lab at Minnesota State University, Mankato. The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Footnotes

Associate Editor: Elizabeth LaRue, The University of Texas at El Paso

References

Aquarius Systems (2010) Aquatic Weed Harvesters, Aquarius-Systems. http://www.aquarius-systems.com/Pages/53/aquatic_weed_harvesters.aspx.html. Accessed: March 16, 2021Google Scholar
Blanchette, CA (1997) Size and survival of intertidal plants in response to wave action: a case study with Fucus gardneri . J Ecol 78:15631578 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Booms, TL (1999) Vertebrates removed by mechanical weed harvesting in Lake Keesus, Wisconsin. J Aquat Plant Manag 37:3436 Google Scholar
Brainard, AS, Schulz, KL (2017) Impacts of the cryptic macroalgal invader, Nitellopsis obtusa, on macrophyte communities. Freshw Sci 36:5562 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brandt, TL (2017) Evaluation of Aquatic Plant Control via Automated Mechanical Roller System. Cooperstown, NY: SUNY Oneonta Biological Field Station Pp 18 Google Scholar
Carver, P, Wersal, RM (2022) Small plot evaluations of aquatic pesticides for control of starry stonewort (Nitellopsis obtusa) in Lake Koronis, MN. J Aquat Plant Manag 60:7984 Google Scholar
Carver, PJ (2022) Environmental Effects on Biomass Allocation and Small Plot Evaluations of Aquatic Pesticides for Control of Nitellopsis obtusa (Starry Stonewort) Collected from Lake Koronis in Stearns County, Minnesota. MS dissertation. Mankato: Minnesota State University. 51 pCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charrier, B, Le Bail, A, de Reviers, B (2012) Plant proteus: brown algal morphological plasticity and underlying developmental mechanisms. Trends Plant Sci 17:468477 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dudgeon, SR, Johnson, AS (1992) Thick vs thin: thallus morphology and tissue mechanics influence differential drag and dislodgment of 2 codominant seaweeds. J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 165:2343 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fox, AM, Haller, WT, Cuda, JP (2002) Impacts of carbohydrate depleation by repeated clipping on the production of subterrarean turions by dioecious hydrilla. J Aquat Plant Manag 40:99104 Google Scholar
Ginn, BK, Dias, EFS, Fleischaker, T (2021) Trends in submersed aquatic plant communities in a large, inland lake: impacts of an invasion by starry stonewort (Nitellopsis obtusa). Lake Reserv Manag 37:199213 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glisson, WJ, Wagner, CK, McComas, SR, Farnum, K, Verhoeven, MR, Muthukrishnan, R, Larkin, DJ (2018) Responses of the invasive alga starry stonewort (Nitellopsis obtusa) to control efforts in a Minnesota lake. Lake Reserv Manag 34:283295 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenfield, BK, David, N, Hunt, J, Wittmann, M, Siemering, G (2004) Aquatic pesticide monitoring program review of alternative aquatic pest control methods for California waters. Oakland, CA: San Francisco Estuary Institute. 106 p Google Scholar
Harrow-Lyle, TJ, Kirkwood, AE (2021) Pervasive changes to the lower aquatic food web following Nitellopsis obtusa establishment in a large, shallow lake. Freshw Bot 67:533541 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kipp, RM, McCarthy, M, Fusaro, A (2014) Nitellopsis obtusa . USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database. Gainesville, FL: U.S. Geological Survey Wetland and Aquatic Research Center Google Scholar
Koehl, MAR (1984) How do benthic organisms withstand moving water? Am Zool 24:5770 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koehl, MAR, Alberte, RS (1988) Flow, flapping, and photosynthesis of Nereocystis luetkeana—a functional comparison of undulate and flat blade morphologies. Mar Biol 99:435444 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koehl, MAR, Silk, WK, Liang, H, Mahadevan, L (2008) How kelp produce blade shapes suited to different flow regimes: a new wrinkle. Integr Comp Biol 48:834851 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Larkin, DJ, Monfils, AK, Boissezon, A, Sleith, RS, Skawinski, PM, Welling, CH, Cahill, BC, Karol, KG (2018) Biology, ecology, and management of starry stonewort (Nittelopsis obtusa; Characae): A Red-listed Eurasian green alga invasive in North America. Aquat Bot 148:1524 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayence, CE, Marshall, DJ, Godfree, RC (2010) Hydrologic and mechanical control for an invasive wetland plant, Juncus ingens, and implications for rehabilitating and managing Murray River floodplain wetlands, Australia. Wetlands Ecol Manag 18:717730 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menninger, H (2011) A Review of the Science and Management of Eurasian Watermilfoil: Recommendations for Future Action in New York State. Ithaca, NY: New York Invasive Species Research Institute, Cornell University. Pp 146 Google Scholar
Middleton, BA (1990) Effect of water depth and clipping frequency on the growth and survival of four wetland plant species. Aquat Bot 37:189196 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikol, GF (1985) Effects of harvesting on aquatic vegetation and juvenile fish populations at Saratoga Lake, New York. J Aquat Plant Manag 23:5963 Google Scholar
Pokrzywinski, KL, Getsinger, KD, Steckart, B, Midwood, JD (2020) Aligning Research and Management Priorities for Nitellopsis obtusa (Starry Stonewort). Buffalo, NY: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center, Aquatic Plant Control Research Program. 37 pCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pullman, D, Crawford, G (2010) A decade of starry stonewort in Michigan: observations and operational management considerations 1999 to 2009. LakeLine Summer:36–42Google Scholar
Sleith, RS, Havens, AJ, Stewart, RA, Karol, KG (2015) Distribution of Nitellopsis obtusa (Characeae) in New York, USA. Brittonia 67:166172 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turnage, G, Madsen, JD, Wersal, RM, Byrd, JD (2019) Simulated mechanical control of flowering rush (Butomus umbellatus) under mesocosm conditions. Invasive Plant Sci Manag 12:120123 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wersal, RM (2022) Small-scale evaluations of select pesticides for development of management recommendations for starry stonewort (Nitellopis obtusa). J Aquat Plant Manag 60:1015 Google Scholar
Wile, I (1978) Environmental effects of mechanical harvesting. J Aquat Plant Manag 16:1420 Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Mean (± 1 SE) bulbil density (N m−2) for the clipping treatments (0, 1, 2, 4) at 16 and 52 wk after initial treatment (WAT) for both trials. 16 WAT Trial 1: F = 22.57, P < 0.01; 16 WAT Trial 2: F = 0.65, P = 0.59; 52 WAT Trial 1: F = 18.04, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 2: F = 6.67, P < 0.01. Bars sharing the same letter are not different according to a Dunn’s all-pairwise comparison at an α ≤ 0.05 significance level. Dashed line represents mean pretreatment bulbil density (Trial 1 = 14,568 bulbils m−2; Trial 2 = 6,082 bulbils m−2).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Mean (± 1 SE) thalli biomass (g dry weight [DW]) for the clipping treatments (0, 1, 2, 4) at 16 and 52 wk after initial treatment (WAT) for both trials. 16 WAT Trial 1: F = 32.55, P < 0.01; 16 WAT Trial 2: F = 20.16, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 1: F = 36.33, P < 0.01; 52 WAT Trial 2: F = 30.89, P < 0.01). Bars sharing the same letter are not different according to a Dunn’s all-pairwise comparison at an α ≤ 0.05 significance level. Dashed line represents mean pretreatment thalli biomass (Trial 1 = 0.48 g DW; Trial 2 = 0.29 g DW).

Figure 2

Table 1. Average biomass removal of Nitellopsis obtusa after successive clippings.a