Soil and water bioengineering (SWBE) is increasingly used as a nature-based solution for riverbank stabilization and riparian restoration, yet its effectiveness in tropical environments remains constrained by limited field-based evidence of species performance under hydrological disturbance. This study evaluated the establishment success and ecological effectiveness of four native riparian species (Croton urucurana Baill., Sesbania virgata (Cav.) Pers., Iochroma arborescens (L.) J.M.H.Shaw, and Gymnanthes schottiana Müll.Arg.) installed as live cuttings on a riprap structure exposed to recurrent flooding along the Paraopeba River, Brazil. A total of 160 live cuttings were monitored over a 33-month establishment period to assess survival, structural development, spontaneous vegetation recruitment, and changes in soil chemical properties and soil organic carbon stocks. Flooding acted as a dominant ecological filter, causing substantial early mortality, with overall survival declining sharply during a 70-day inundation period that included 58 consecutive days of submergence. Croton urucurana exhibited the highest survival and structural development, reaching median heights exceeding 5 m and cumulative shoot diameters greater than 100 mm after 33 months, whereas Gymnanthes schottiana showed complete mortality within the first year. Vegetation establishment facilitated spontaneous recruitment of native woody species, with 22 individuals recorded in planted sections compared to only 3 in adjacent non-planted areas. Soil organic carbon stocks increased from 38.9 to 60.6 Mg C ha−1 in the 0–40 cm soil profile, indicating rapid soil development. These results demonstrate that SWBE interventions can simultaneously promote riverbank stabilization, vegetation recovery, and soil carbon accumulation. By providing quantitative field-based evidence under realistic hydrological disturbance conditions, this study advances the understanding of species selection and the ecological effectiveness of SWBE interventions in tropical riparian ecosystems.
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Kettenhuber et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a67eebf353c071a6f0a8b9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052371
Paula Letícia Wolff Kettenhuber
Universidade Federal de Viçosa
Sebastião Venâncio Martins
Fagner Darlan Dias Corrêa
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