4.8 Article

Vegetation's importance in regulating surface elevation in a coastal salt marsh facing elevated rates of sea level rise

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 18, 期 11, 页码 3377-3382

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02792.x

关键词

accretion; coastal wetlands; elevation change; sea level rise; SET; Spartina alterniflora; subsidence

资金

  1. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [R832221]
  2. EPA [R832221, 909058] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Rising sea levels threaten the sustainability of coastal wetlands around the globe, thus understanding how increased inundation alters the elevation change mechanisms in these systems is increasingly important. Typically, the ability of coastal marshes to maintain their position in the intertidal zone depends on the accumulation of both organic and inorganic materials, so one, if not both, of these processes must increase to keep pace with rising seas, assuming all else constant. To determine the importance of vegetation in these processes, we measured elevation change and surface accretion over a 4-year period in recently subsided, unvegetated marshes, resulting from drought-induced marsh dieback, in paired planted and unplanted plots. We compared soil and vegetation responses in these plots with paired reference plots that had neither experienced dieback nor subsidence. All treatments (unvegetated, planted, and reference) were replicated six times. The recently subsided areas were 610 similar to cm lower in elevation than the reference marshes at the beginning of the study; thus, mean water levels were 610 similar to cm higher in these areas vs. the reference sites. Surface accretion rates were lowest in the unplanted plots at 2.3 similar to mm similar to yr-1, but increased in the presence of vegetation to 16.4 similar to mm similar to yr-1 in the reference marsh and 26.1 similar to mm similar to yr-1 in the planted plots. The rates of elevation change were also bolstered by the presence of vegetation. The unplanted areas decreased in elevation by 9.4 similar to mm similar to yr-1; whereas the planted areas increased in elevation by 13.3 similar to mm similar to yr-1, and the reference marshes increased by 3.5 similar to mm similar to yr-1. These results highlight the importance of vegetation in the accretionary processes that maintain marsh surface elevation within the intertidal zone, and provide evidence that coastal wetlands may be able to keep pace with a rising sea in certain situations.

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