4.5 Article

Climate Change Implications for Tidal Marshes and Food Web Linkages to Estuarine and Coastal Nekton

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 1637-1648

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-020-00891-1

Keywords

Tidal wetlands; Seascapes; Multiple stressors; Ecosystem resilience; Trophic relays

Funding

  1. University of South Alabama
  2. Grand Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve
  3. DISL Foundation
  4. CERF
  5. Delta Stewardship Council Delta Science Program [19054]
  6. Mississippi-Alabama- Grant
  7. Mississippi-Georgia- Grant
  8. Mississippi-Washington-Sea Grant

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Climate change is impacting coastal and estuarine ecosystems worldwide, leading to shifts in environmental conditions and the need to quantify its short- and long-term effects on tidal marsh seascape structure and function. The multiple stressor framework offers a promising approach for understanding the interactions between climate change and other stressors on tidal marshes and coastal ecosystems, highlighting the importance of studying trophic linkages for future climate change research.
Climate change is altering naturally fluctuating environmental conditions in coastal and estuarine ecosystems across the globe. Departures from long-term averages and ranges of environmental variables are increasingly being observed as directional changes [e.g., rising sea levels, sea surface temperatures (SST)] and less predictable periodic cycles (e.g., Atlantic or Pacific decadal oscillations) and extremes (e.g., coastal flooding, marine heatwaves). Quantifying the short- and long-term impacts of climate change on tidal marsh seascape structure and function for nekton is a critical step toward fisheries conservation and management. The multiple stressor framework provides a promising approach for advancing integrative, cross-disciplinary research on tidal marshes and food web dynamics. It can be used to quantify climate change effects on and interactions between coastal oceans (e.g., SST, ocean currents, waves) and watersheds (e.g., precipitation, river flows), tidal marsh geomorphology (e.g., vegetation structure, elevation capital, sedimentation), and estuarine and coastal nekton (e.g., species distributions, life history adaptations, predator-prey dynamics). However, disentangling the cumulative impacts of multiple interacting stressors on tidal marshes, whether the effects are additive, synergistic, or antagonistic, and the time scales at which they occur, poses a significant research challenge. This perspective highlights the key physical and ecological processes affecting tidal marshes, with an emphasis on the trophic linkages between marsh production and estuarine and coastal nekton, recommended for consideration in future climate change studies. Such studies are urgently needed to understand climate change effects on tidal marshes now and into the future.

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