Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels

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Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels. / Ladd, Cai J.T.; Duggan Edwards, Mollie; Pages, J.F. et al.
In: Frontiers in Marine Science, Vol. 8, 757715, 20.10.2021.

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Ladd, C. J. T., Duggan Edwards, M., Pages, J. F., & Skov, M. (2021). Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels. Frontiers in Marine Science, 8, Article 757715. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.757715

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Ladd CJT, Duggan Edwards M, Pages JF, Skov M. Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2021 Oct 20;8:757715. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2021.757715

Author

Ladd, Cai J.T. ; Duggan Edwards, Mollie ; Pages, J.F. et al. / Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels. In: Frontiers in Marine Science. 2021 ; Vol. 8.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Saltmarsh resilience to periodic shifts in tidal channels

AU - Ladd, Cai J.T.

AU - Duggan Edwards, Mollie

AU - Pages, J.F.

AU - Skov, Martin

PY - 2021/10/20

Y1 - 2021/10/20

N2 - Resilience of coastal ecosystems to climate change is largely determined by the interaction between plants and the surrounding tidal environment. Research has tended to focus on processes operating at the local scale to explain resilience mechanisms, overlooking potentially important landscape-scale processes and patterns. We show from aerial images spanning 67 years across 3 estuaries that saltmarsh loss was compensated by expansion elsewhere in the estuary when tidal channels shifted position. Compensatory expansion rates were as high as 6 m/yr. This phenomenon of “geomorphic compensation” represents a hitherto overlooked large-scale self-organizing pattern that facilitates the long-term persistence of marshes in estuaries. The geomorphic compensation pattern likely also occurs in other hydrological systems including mangrove forests, and seagrass meadows, and river islands. Compensatory erosion-expansion patterns occurred at the same time as net marsh extent increased by between 120 and 235% across all three estuaries. Marsh expansion mostly occurred in the lower parts of each estuary, where channel migration and compensatory expansion was less evident. Patterns of geomorphic compensation therefore appear to operate at discrete spatio-temporal scales, nested within a hierarchy of coastal morphodynamic processes that govern longer-term patterns of either net marsh gain or loss. Coastal ecosystem resilience can therefore only be fully appreciated when examining erosion and expansion patterns at both local and landscape scales. The intrinsic dynamics of marshes described here have important implications for the long-term delivery of ecosystem services.

AB - Resilience of coastal ecosystems to climate change is largely determined by the interaction between plants and the surrounding tidal environment. Research has tended to focus on processes operating at the local scale to explain resilience mechanisms, overlooking potentially important landscape-scale processes and patterns. We show from aerial images spanning 67 years across 3 estuaries that saltmarsh loss was compensated by expansion elsewhere in the estuary when tidal channels shifted position. Compensatory expansion rates were as high as 6 m/yr. This phenomenon of “geomorphic compensation” represents a hitherto overlooked large-scale self-organizing pattern that facilitates the long-term persistence of marshes in estuaries. The geomorphic compensation pattern likely also occurs in other hydrological systems including mangrove forests, and seagrass meadows, and river islands. Compensatory erosion-expansion patterns occurred at the same time as net marsh extent increased by between 120 and 235% across all three estuaries. Marsh expansion mostly occurred in the lower parts of each estuary, where channel migration and compensatory expansion was less evident. Patterns of geomorphic compensation therefore appear to operate at discrete spatio-temporal scales, nested within a hierarchy of coastal morphodynamic processes that govern longer-term patterns of either net marsh gain or loss. Coastal ecosystem resilience can therefore only be fully appreciated when examining erosion and expansion patterns at both local and landscape scales. The intrinsic dynamics of marshes described here have important implications for the long-term delivery of ecosystem services.

KW - coastal biogeomorpholoy

KW - ecosystem resilience

KW - scale-dependence

KW - saltmarsh edge

KW - tidal channel migration

KW - sheltered macrotidal estuaries

KW - ecosystem services

U2 - 10.3389/fmars.2021.757715

DO - 10.3389/fmars.2021.757715

M3 - Article

VL - 8

JO - Frontiers in Marine Science

JF - Frontiers in Marine Science

SN - 2296-7745

M1 - 757715

ER -