Opposing indirect effects of domestic herbivores on saltmarsh erosion

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Opposing indirect effects of domestic herbivores on saltmarsh erosion. / Pages Fauria, Jordi; Jenkins, Stuart; Bouma, Tjeerd et al.
In: Ecosystems, 15.08.2019, p. 1055-1068.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Pages Fauria J, Jenkins S, Bouma T, Sharps E, Skov M. Opposing indirect effects of domestic herbivores on saltmarsh erosion. Ecosystems. 2019 Aug 15;1055-1068. Epub 2018 Nov 30. doi: 10.1007/s10021-018-0322-5

Author

Pages Fauria, Jordi ; Jenkins, Stuart ; Bouma, Tjeerd et al. / Opposing indirect effects of domestic herbivores on saltmarsh erosion. In: Ecosystems. 2019 ; pp. 1055-1068.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Opposing indirect effects of domestic herbivores on saltmarsh erosion

AU - Pages Fauria, Jordi

AU - Jenkins, Stuart

AU - Bouma, Tjeerd

AU - Sharps, Elwyn

AU - Skov, Martin

PY - 2019/8/15

Y1 - 2019/8/15

N2 - Herbivores can sometimes influence the geomorphology of landscapes, particularly in systems dominated by hydrology. Salt marshes deliver globally valuable benefits, including coastal protection, yet they sometimes rapidly erode. Triggers for erosion are often unknown, but livestock grazing is a suspected cause in many regions of the world where agricultural use of saltmarshes is pervasive. To understand the influence of grazing on saltmarsh erosion, we sampled the plant community, soil chemistry and soil mechanical properties along 2-5 creeks in grazed and ungrazed marshes. Erosion was quantified as: (1) the rates of erosion of extracted soil-plant cores in a hydrological flume and (2) the number of erosional break-offs (‘slump blocks’) per creek. We found that domestic herbivores influenced saltmarsh geomorphology via two indirect and opposing pathways: one involving soil mechanical properties and the other mediated by plant traits and bare soil cover, all within a soil physico-chemical environment. The net effect of grazing was a reduction of saltmarsh lateral erodibility, thus an increase in marsh resilience. Our results highlight the role of herbivores not only as controllers of the flow of energy and materials through the trophic web, but also as modifiers of the abiotic environment. Managers and scientists must remain vigilant to both the obvious direct, as well as the more nuanced indirect pathways, that can influence grazed ecosystems. This study calls for a closer look to the biological-side of the equation when assessing biogeomorphic feedbacks and plant-soil-animal interactions.

AB - Herbivores can sometimes influence the geomorphology of landscapes, particularly in systems dominated by hydrology. Salt marshes deliver globally valuable benefits, including coastal protection, yet they sometimes rapidly erode. Triggers for erosion are often unknown, but livestock grazing is a suspected cause in many regions of the world where agricultural use of saltmarshes is pervasive. To understand the influence of grazing on saltmarsh erosion, we sampled the plant community, soil chemistry and soil mechanical properties along 2-5 creeks in grazed and ungrazed marshes. Erosion was quantified as: (1) the rates of erosion of extracted soil-plant cores in a hydrological flume and (2) the number of erosional break-offs (‘slump blocks’) per creek. We found that domestic herbivores influenced saltmarsh geomorphology via two indirect and opposing pathways: one involving soil mechanical properties and the other mediated by plant traits and bare soil cover, all within a soil physico-chemical environment. The net effect of grazing was a reduction of saltmarsh lateral erodibility, thus an increase in marsh resilience. Our results highlight the role of herbivores not only as controllers of the flow of energy and materials through the trophic web, but also as modifiers of the abiotic environment. Managers and scientists must remain vigilant to both the obvious direct, as well as the more nuanced indirect pathways, that can influence grazed ecosystems. This study calls for a closer look to the biological-side of the equation when assessing biogeomorphic feedbacks and plant-soil-animal interactions.

U2 - 10.1007/s10021-018-0322-5

DO - 10.1007/s10021-018-0322-5

M3 - Article

SP - 1055

EP - 1068

JO - Ecosystems

JF - Ecosystems

SN - 1435-0629

ER -