4.7 Article

Impact of Extreme Disturbances on Suspended Sediment in Western Florida Bay: Implications for Seagrass Resilience

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.633240

Keywords

seagrass; suspended sediment; disturbance; resilience; Florida Bay; Everglades; seagrass die-off; Hurricane Irma

Funding

  1. Critical Ecosystems Study Initiative (CESI) of the National Park Service
  2. Munson Foundation through SECOORA
  3. Everglades Foundation ForEverglades Scholarship
  4. Institute of Environment Christina Menendez Fellowship
  5. Florida Coastal Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research program under National Science Foundation [DEB-1832229]
  6. Presidential Fellowship from the University Graduate School at Florida International University

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Different disturbances can impact seagrass ecosystems at varying scales with varying consequences. Combining satellite imagery with field data helps monitor disturbances and investigating disturbances at various scales is important to understand seagrass resilience in the context of future extreme events.
Seagrasses are threatened worldwide due to anthropogenic and natural disturbances disrupting the multiple feedbacks needed to maintain these ecosystems. If the disturbance is severe enough, seagrass systems may undergo a regime shift to a degraded system state that is resistant to recovery. In Florida Bay, Florida, United States, two recent, large-scale disturbances (a drought-induced seagrass die-off in 2015 and Hurricane Irma in 2017) have caused 8,777 ha of seagrass beds to degrade into a turbid, unvegetated state, causing a large sediment plume. Using satellite imagery digitization and long-term seagrass cover data, we investigate the expansion of this sediment plume between 2008 and 2020 and the potential interaction of this sediment plume with seagrass recovery in two focal basins in Florida Bay affected by the die off, Johnson and Rankin. The average size of the sediment plume increased by 37% due to the die-off and Hurricane Irma, increasing from an average of 163.5 km2 before the disturbances to an average of 223.5 km2. The expansion of the plume was basin specific, expanding into Johnson after the 2015 seagrass die-off with expansive and long-lasting effects, but only expanding into Rankin after Hurricane Irma with less severe and short-term effects. Furthermore, the sediment plume was negatively correlated with seagrass cover in Johnson, but held no relationship with seagrass cover in Rankin. Thus, different disturbances can act upon seagrass ecosystems at varying scales with varying consequences. This study illustrates the advantage of combining satellite imagery with field data to monitor disturbances as well as highlights the importance of investigating disturbances of seagrass ecosystems at various scales to comprehend seagrass resilience in the context of future extreme events.

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