scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Marsh

About: Marsh is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7789 publications have been published within this topic receiving 231218 citations. The topic is also known as: brook.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the main ecological services across a variety of estuarine and coastal ecosystems (ECEs) including marshes, mangroves, nearshore coral reefs, seagrass beds, and sand beaches and dunes are reviewed.
Abstract: The global decline in estuarine and coastal ecosystems (ECEs) is affecting a number of critical benefits, or ecosystem services. We review the main ecological services across a variety of ECEs, including marshes, mangroves, nearshore coral reefs, seagrass beds, and sand beaches and dunes. Where possible, we indicate estimates of the key economic values arising from these services, and discuss how the natural variability of ECEs impacts their benefits, the synergistic relationships of ECEs across seascapes, and management implications. Although reliable valuation estimates are beginning to emerge for the key services of some ECEs, such as coral reefs, salt marshes, and mangroves, many of the important benefits of seagrass beds and sand dunes and beaches have not been assessed properly. Even for coral reefs, marshes, and mangroves, important ecological services have yet to be valued reliably, such as cross-ecosystem nutrient transfer (coral reefs), erosion control (marshes), and pollution control (mangroves). An important issue for valuing certain ECE services, such as coastal protection and habitat-fishery linkages, is that the ecological functions underlying these services vary spatially and temporally. Allowing for the connectivity between ECE habitats also may have important implications for assessing the ecological functions underlying key ecosystems services, such coastal protection, control of erosion, and habitat-fishery linkages. Finally, we conclude by suggesting an action plan for protecting and/or enhancing the immediate and longer-term values of ECE services. Because the connectivity of ECEs across land-sea gradients also influences the provision of certain ecosystem services, management of the entire seascape will be necessary to preserve such synergistic effects. Other key elements of an action plan include further ecological and economic collaborative research on valuing ECE services, improving institutional and legal frameworks for management, controlling and regulating destructive economic activities, and developing ecological restoration options.

3,750 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2011
TL;DR: Hydrodynamic analysis of simulated hurricane storm surges and economic valuation of expected property damages shows that the presence of coastal marshes and their vegetation has a demonstrable effect on reducing storm surge levels, thus generating significant values in terms of protecting property in southeast Louisiana.
Abstract: The Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 and Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 have spurred global interest in the role of coastal wetlands and vegetation in reducing storm surge and flood damages. Evidence that coastal wetlands reduce storm surge and attenuate waves is often cited in support of restoring Gulf Coast wetlands to protect coastal communities and property from hurricane damage. Yet interdisciplinary studies combining hydrodynamic and economic analysis to explore this relationship for temperate marshes in the Gulf are lacking. By combining hydrodynamic analysis of simulated hurricane storm surges and economic valuation of expected property damages, we show that the presence of coastal marshes and their vegetation has a demonstrable effect on reducing storm surge levels, thus generating significant values in terms of protecting property in southeast Louisiana. Simulations for four storms along a sea to land transect show that surge levels decline with wetland continuity and vegetation roughness. Regressions confirm that wetland continuity and vegetation along the transect are effective in reducing storm surge levels. A 0.1 increase in wetland continuity per meter reduces property damages for the average affected area analyzed in southeast Louisiana, which includes New Orleans, by $99-$133, and a 0.001 increase in vegetation roughness decreases damages by $24-$43. These reduced damages are equivalent to saving 3 to 5 and 1 to 2 properties per storm for the average area, respectively.

2,672 citations

Book
29 Jul 1988
TL;DR: A survey of the vegetation of Central Europe can be found in this paper, with a focus on the vegetation under the influence of man and the development of the plant cover under man's influence.
Abstract: Foreword Preface to the first edition Preface to the second edition Preface to the third and fourth editions Part I. Introductory Survey: 1. The vegetation of Central Europe in general 2. The development of the plant cover under the influence of man Part II. Near-natural woods and thickets: 1. General view of the central European woodlands 2. Beech and mixed beech woods 3. Other deciduous woodland excluding flood plains and mires 4. Coniferous woodland and mixed woods dominated by conifers 5. Tree and shrub vegetation of flood plains and peat lands Part III. Other Near-Natural Formations: 1. The vegetation of fresh water, its banks and springs 2. Woodland fens and intermediate mires compared with other mire types 3. Raised bogs and the communities connected with them 4. Sea marshes and inland saline habitats 5. Dunes and their vegetation successions 6. The vegetation above the alpine tree line 7. Plant life in the region of eternal snow 8. On the epiphytic vegetation in central Europe Part IV. Formations Created and Maintained Largely by Man's Activities: 1. Arid and semi-arid grasslands in colline and monotane climate 2. Dwarf-shrub heaths and commons on strongly acid soils 3. Forestry plantations and woodland clearings 4. Woodland edges, bushes, hedges and their barbarous margins 5. Hay and litter meadows 6. Manured pastures, trodden swards and those subject to flooding 7. Man-influenced vegetation of muddy ground, lakesides and banks 8. Ruderal communities of drier sites 9. Weed communities of arable land, gardens and vineyards 10. Vegetation development on abandoned land Tabular summary and index: Bibliography Remarks on the changes in the system of plant sociology Summary of the vegetation units and species Subject Index.

1,429 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the average soil carbon density of mangrove swamps (0.055 ± 0.004 g cm−3) is significantly higher than the salt marsh average ( 0.039 − 0.003 g cm −3) due to increased decay rates at higher temperatures.
Abstract: [1] Wetlands represent the largest component of the terrestrial biological carbon pool and thus play an important role in global carbon cycles. Most global carbon budgets, however, have focused on dry land ecosystems that extend over large areas and have not accounted for the many small, scattered carbon-storing ecosystems such as tidal saline wetlands. We compiled data for 154 sites in mangroves and salt marshes from the western and eastern Atlantic and Pacific coasts, as well as the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean Ocean, and Gulf of Mexico. The set of sites spans a latitudinal range from 22.4°S in the Indian Ocean to 55.5°N in the northeastern Atlantic. The average soil carbon density of mangrove swamps (0.055 ± 0.004 g cm−3) is significantly higher than the salt marsh average (0.039 ± 0.003 g cm−3). Soil carbon density in mangrove swamps and Spartina patens marshes declines with increasing average annual temperature, probably due to increased decay rates at higher temperatures. In contrast, carbon sequestration rates were not significantly different between mangrove swamps and salt marshes. Variability in sediment accumulation rates within marshes is a major control of carbon sequestration rates masking any relationship with climatic parameters. Globally, these combined wetlands store at least 44.6 Tg C yr−1 and probably more, as detailed areal inventories are not available for salt marshes in China and South America. Much attention has been given to the role of freshwater wetlands, particularly northern peatlands, as carbon sinks. In contrast to peatlands, salt marshes and mangroves release negligible amounts of greenhouse gases and store more carbon per unit area.

1,371 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is expected that climate change will have a pronounced effect on wetlands through alterations in hydrological regimes with great global variability, and it is important to recognize that specific restoration and management plans will require examination by habitat.
Abstract: Global climate change is recognized as a threat to species survival and the health of natural systems. Scientists worldwide are looking at the ecological and hydrological impacts resulting from climate change. Climate change will make future efforts to restore and manage wetlands more complex. Wetland systems are vulnerable to changes in quantity and quality of their water supply, and it is expected that climate change will have a pronounced effect on wetlands through alterations in hydrological regimes with great global variability. Wetland habitat responses to climate change and the implications for restoration will be realized differently on a regional and mega-watershed level, making it important to recognize that specific restoration and management plans will require examination by habitat. Floodplains, mangroves, seagrasses, saltmarshes, arctic wetlands, peatlands, freshwater marshes and forests are very diverse habitats, with different stressors and hence different management and restoration techniques are needed. The Sundarban (Bangladesh and India), Mekong river delta (Vietnam), and southern Ontario (Canada) are examples of major wetland complexes where the effects of climate change are evolving in different ways. Thus, successful long term restoration and management of these systems will hinge on how we choose to respond to the effects of climate change. How will we choose priorities for restoration and research? Will enough water be available to rehabilitate currently damaged, water-starved wetland ecosystems? This is a policy paper originally produced at the request of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and incorporates opinion, interpretation and scientific-based arguments.

991 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Habitat
25.2K papers, 825.7K citations
83% related
Ecosystem
25.4K papers, 1.2M citations
82% related
Vegetation
49.2K papers, 1.4M citations
80% related
Biological dispersal
30K papers, 1.2M citations
79% related
Species richness
61.6K papers, 2.1M citations
79% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023416
2022917
2021309
2020283
2019287
2018270