4.5 Article

Land-Sea Coupling and Global-Driven Forcing: Following Some of Scott Nixon's Challenges

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 1189-1201

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-014-9808-3

Keywords

Land use changes; Upwelling; La Nina; Coastal watersheds; Eutrophication; Deforestation; Estuaries; Mangroves; Spatially subsidized foodwebs; Connectivity

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation
  2. US National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
  3. CICEET, the Woods Hole Consortium
  4. Ocean Life Institute of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Adjoined watershed-estuary-coastal ecosystems are coupled by biogeochemical and hydrodynamic processes, as Scott Nixon repeatedly argued in his many contributions. Case histories from Waquoit Bay and the Pacific Coast of Panama, supplemented by information from other sites, make evident that the couplings that enable connectivity among spatially separate landscape units, while highly subject to detailed local contingencies, take place in every coastal zone, can be powerfully affected by human activities on land, and by global-scale forcings, as Scott Nixon often reminded us. While the factors that determine the details of land-sea coupling differ significantly from one coastal zone to the next, estuarine systems manage, to different degrees, to furnish ecological services not only as filters or transformers of land-derived inputs but also as exporters of energy-rich subsidies to coastal food webs.

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