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Journal ArticleDOI

Vegetation Dynamics in Rhode Island Salt Marshes During a Period of Accelerating Sea Level Rise and Extreme Sea Level Events

TLDR
In this article, the authors combine data from two salt marsh monitoring and assessment programs in Rhode Island that were designed to assess marsh responses to sea level rise and use these data to document temporal and spatial patterns in marsh vegetation during the current period of extreme water level increases.
Abstract
Sea level rise is a major stressor on many salt marshes, and its impacts include creek widening, ponding, vegetation dieback, and drowning. Marsh vegetation changes have been associated with sea level rise across southern New England, but most of these studies pre-date the current period of rapidly accelerating sea level rise coupled with episodic events of extreme increases in water levels. Here, we combine data from two salt marsh monitoring and assessment programs in Rhode Island that were designed to assess marsh responses to sea level rise and use these data to document temporal and spatial patterns in marsh vegetation during the current period of extreme water level increases. Vegetation monitoring at two Narragansett Bay salt marshes confirms the ongoing decline of the salt meadow species Spartina patens during this period as it becomes replaced by Spartina alterniflora. Bare ground resulting from vegetation dieback was significantly related to mean high water levels and led to the rapid conversion of mixed Spartina assemblages to S. alterniflora monocultures. A broader spatial assessment of RI marshes shows that S. alterniflora dominance increases at lower elevation marshes toward the mouth of Narraganset Bay. Our data provide additional evidence that S. patens continues to decline in southern New England marshes and show that losses can accelerate during periods of extreme high water levels. Unless adaptive management actions are taken, we predict that marshes throughout RI will continue to lose salt meadow habitat and eventually resemble lower elevation marshes that are already dominated by S. alterniflora monocultures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A synthesis of methane emissions from shallow vegetated coastal ecosystems

TL;DR: Overall, this review highlights the current and growing importance of vegetated coastal ecosystems in the global marine CH4 budget and proposes that future changes in temperature and other anthropogenic activites (e.g., nitrogen loading) will likely increase CH4 emissions from these ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Climate Change Adaptation Strategy for Management of Coastal Marsh Systems

TL;DR: The CCAS provides a framework and methodology for successfully managing coastal systems faced with deteriorating habitat, accelerated sea level rise, and changes in precipitation and storm patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating Drone Imagery into High Resolution Satellite Remote Sensing Assessments of Estuarine Environments

TL;DR: This study used UAS imagery to assist training a Support Vector Machine to classify WorldView-3 and RapidEye satellite imagery of the Rachel Carson Reserve in North Carolina, USA, and found drastic shoreline change but general stability of emergent wetlands.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of coastal management approaches to support the integration of ecological and human community planning for climate change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a comprehensive review of how natural infrastructure is being used along the United States Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean coast related to four habitats: tidal marshes, beaches and barrier islands, mangroves, and biogenic reefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon dioxide fluxes reflect plant zonation and belowground biomass in a coastal marsh

TL;DR: In this article, greenhouse gas fluxes in a New England salt marsh were compared among major plant-defined zones during growing seasons, and the relationship between CO2 and CH4 fluxes with several native plant metrics, a multivariate nonlinear model was used.
References
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Climate change 2007: the physical science basis

TL;DR: The first volume of the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report as mentioned in this paper was published in 2007 and covers several topics including the extensive range of observations now available for the atmosphere and surface, changes in sea level, assesses the paleoclimatic perspective, climate change causes both natural and anthropogenic, and climate models for projections of global climate.
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