4.5 Article

Are saltmarshes younger than mangrove swamps?

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8481

Keywords

Halophyte; Mangrove; Paleoecology; Saltmarsh

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Temperate saltmarshes and tropical mangrove swamps are important ecosystems that facilitate nutrient transfers and species colonization between land and sea. The origins of saltmarshes are less clear compared to mangroves, but evidence suggests that they emerged during the late Eocene to Early Oligocene. Unlike mangroves with tropical origins, saltmarsh vegetation mainly originates from temperate regions. Saltmarsh-specialized molluscs, on the other hand, are derived from tropical lineages and reflect recent colonizations. The development of saltmarshes during the Neogene enhanced near shore productivity along temperate and Arctic coastlines.
Temperate saltmarshes and tropical mangrove swamps (mangals) are marine-influenced, productive ecosystems that enhance nutrient transfers between land and sea and facilitate colonization of lineages between terrestrial and marine habitats. Mangals have existed since the late Cretaceous, but the time of origin of saltmarshes is less clear. On the basis of phylogenetic and fossil evidence for plants and molluscs specialized to these ecosystems, I propose that saltmarsh vegetation of angiosperms began during the latest Eocene to Early Oligocene (35-30 Ma), at least 34 m.y. after the origin of mangals. The plants that colonized saltmarshes then and later have mainly temperate origins, contrasting with the tropical-forest origins of mangroves. Unlike the plants, the few saltmarsh-specialized molluscs are derived from tropical lineages and reflect recent colonizations. The development of saltmarshes during the Neogene enhanced near shore productivity along temperate and Arctic coastlines.

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