4.6 Article

Runnels mitigate marsh drowning in microtidal salt marshes

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Correction Environmental Sciences

Buying Time with Runnels: a Climate Adaptation Tool for Salt Marshes (Jan, 10.1007/s12237-021-01028-8, 2022)

Alice F. Besterman et al.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2022)

Review Geochemistry & Geophysics

Surface Water and Groundwater Interactions in Salt Marshes and Their Impact on Plant Ecology and Coastal Biogeochemistry

Pei Xin et al.

Summary: Salt marshes are important ecosystems that provide essential ecological services, but they have been lost globally due to human activities and climate change. The interactions between tidal water and groundwater in salt marshes affect plant growth and biogeochemical exchange with coastal water. However, there are still significant knowledge gaps regarding the hydrological and ecological links in salt marshes and the challenges they face.

REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Waffle pools in ditched salt marshes: assessment, potential causes, and management

Joseph A. M. Smith et al.

Summary: Ditching is a common human impact on tidal marshes, leading to the formation of waffle pools which are a repeating pattern of shallow rectangular pools in the marsh interior. Waffle pools are most likely to occur where tidal range is less than 0.8 m and can also be influenced by anthropogenic features reducing tidal range. Isolated and tidally-connected pools, on the other hand, are not influenced by tidal range and are more likely to occur in unditched marshes with higher elevations.

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2022)

Article Computer Science, Information Systems

Deep Learning of High-Resolution Aerial Imagery for Coastal Marsh Change Detection: A Comparative Study

Grayson R. Morgan et al.

Summary: Deep learning techniques, specifically the U-Net architecture, have been proven effective in classifying high-resolution aerial images. The U-Net classifier showed significantly higher accuracy compared to traditional machine learning classifiers (random trees and support vector machine) in determining the spatial extent and changes of land cover classes. Change detection analysis revealed minimal change in the marsh extent, but increased land development poses a potential threat to marsh health.

ISPRS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEO-INFORMATION (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Sediment Accumulation, Elevation Change, and the Vulnerability of Tidal Marshes in the Delaware Estuary and Barnegat Bay to Accelerated Sea Level Rise

LeeAnn Haaf et al.

Summary: Tidal marshes are valuable habitats that are vulnerable to submergence due to accelerating sea-level rise. Recent increases in sea-level rise require surface accretion rates in tidal marshes to exceed rates of shallow subsidence to keep pace. Different types and geomorphic settings of tidal marshes respond differently to sea-level rise, with estimated lifespan of most marshes being 60 to 80 years, some as few as 5 years.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Relationships between ecosystem properties and sea-level rise vulnerability of tidal wetlands of the US Mid-Atlantic

Tracy Elsey-Quirk et al.

Summary: This study examines the vulnerability of tidal wetlands in the Mid-Atlantic region of the USA to sea level rise. The analysis found that soil bulk density and belowground plant biomass were strong predictors of elevation change across all marsh types. It also revealed that salt marshes closer to the coast and with a higher degree of human modification experienced the greatest loss in marsh area.

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT (2022)

Article Ecology

Salt marsh climate change adaptation: Using runnels to adapt to accelerating sea level rise within a drowning New England salt marsh

Danielle C. Perry et al.

Summary: Sea level rise in New England is accelerating faster than the global average, posing a threat to salt marshes. This study examines the use of runnels as a climate adaptation strategy to enhance drainage in drowning marshes and finds positive impacts on soil properties and vegetation composition, as well as an increase in carbon dioxide uptake.

RESTORATION ECOLOGY (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Pond Dynamics Yield Minimal Net Loss of Vegetation Cover Across an Unditched Salt Marsh Landscape

Joseph A. M. Smith et al.

Summary: Ponds in salt marshes are often misinterpreted as a sign of degradation, but they can also be part of a natural cyclical process. This study found that in unditched salt marshes, the net pond area has remained stable since 1970, indicating a dynamic equilibrium between pond formation and recovery. Changes in pond dynamics may be occurring independently of each other, possibly due to factors such as a decrease in pond formation rate, an increase in pond breaching rate, and a lag in vegetation recovery rate.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

UAV to Inform Restoration: A Case Study From a California Tidal Marsh

John Haskins et al.

Summary: The study evaluated the utility of UAVs for monitoring tidal marsh restoration, optimizing methods for high-resolution orthomosaics and digital elevation models. UAV monitoring achieved 1.1 cm vertical accuracy with 2.1 GCPs per hectare at a flight altitude of 50 m. UAV products were valuable for monitoring soil movement volume, vegetation development, and topographic changes, offering advantages in accessing remote areas and collecting accurate data rapidly.

FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

Mitigating the Legacy Effects of Ditching in a New England Salt Marsh

David M. Burdick et al.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2020)

Article Water Resources

Beyond marsh drowning: The many faces of marsh loss (and gain)

G. Mariotti

ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES (2020)

Article Marine & Freshwater Biology

Drainage enhancement effects on a waterlogged Rhode Island (USA) salt marsh

Kenneth B. Raposa et al.

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE (2019)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Top-down and bottom-up controls on southern New England salt marsh crab populations

Kenneth B. Raposa et al.

Article Environmental Sciences

A Climate Change Adaptation Strategy for Management of Coastal Marsh Systems

Cathleen Wigand et al.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2017)

Article Environmental Sciences

Elevation change and the vulnerability of Rhode Island (USA) salt marshes to sea-level rise

Kenneth B. Raposa et al.

REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE (2017)

Article Environmental Sciences

Development and Application of a Method to Identify Salt Marsh Vulnerability to Sea Level Rise

Marci L. Cole Ekberg et al.

ESTUARIES AND COASTS (2017)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Revisiting salt marsh resilience to sea level rise: Are ponds responsible for permanent land loss?

G. Mariotti

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-EARTH SURFACE (2016)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Population Status of the Seaside Sparrow in Rhode Island: A 25-Year Assessment

Walter J. Berry et al.

NORTHEASTERN NATURALIST (2015)

Article Water Resources

Modelling of groundwater-vegetation interactions in a tidal marsh

Pei Xin et al.

ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES (2013)

Article Plant Sciences

Sudden Vegetation Dieback in Atlantic and Gulf Coast Salt Marshes

W. H. Elmer et al.

PLANT DISEASE (2013)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Coastal eutrophication as a driver of salt marsh loss

Linda A. Deegan et al.

NATURE (2012)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Positive Effects of Nonnative Invasive Phragmites australis on Larval Bullfrogs

Mary Alta Rogalski et al.

PLOS ONE (2012)

Article Environmental Sciences

Salt marsh ecohydrological zonation due to heterogeneous vegetation-groundwater-surface water interactions

Kevan B. Moffett et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2012)

Article Remote Sensing

Land cover change assessment using decision trees, support vector machines and maximum likelihood classification algorithms

J. R. Otukei et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATION AND GEOINFORMATION (2010)

Article Environmental Sciences

Salt Marsh Geomorphological Analyses via Integration of Multitemporal Multispectral Remote Sensing with LIDAR and GIS

Thomas L. Millette et al.

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH (2010)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Cryptic invasion by a non-native genotype of the common reed, Phragmites australis, into North America

K Saltonstall

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2002)