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Coastal Salt Marshes (coastal + salt_marsh)
Selected AbstractsPlant amino acid uptake, soluble N turnover and microbial N capture in soils of a grazed Arctic salt marshJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2003Hugh A. L. Henry Summary 1The uptake of free amino acids by the grass Puccinellia phryganodes was investigated in soils of an Arctic coastal salt marsh, where low temperatures and high salinity limit inorganic nitrogen (N) availability, and the availability of soluble organic N relative to inorganic N is often high. 2Following the injection of 13C15N-amino acid, 15N-ammonium and 15N-nitrate tracers into soils, rates of soluble nitrogen turnover and the incorporation of 13C and 15N into plant roots and shoots were assessed. Chloroform fumigation-extraction was used to estimate the partitioning of labelled substrates into microbial biomass. 3Free amino acids turned over rapidly in the soil, with half-lives ranging from 8.2 to 22.8 h for glycine and 8.9 to 25.2 h for leucine, compared with 5.6 to 14.7 h and 5.6 to 15.6 h for ammonium and nitrate, respectively. 15N from both organic and inorganic substrates was incorporated rapidly into plant tissue and the ratio of 13C/15N incorporation into plant tissue indicated that at least 5,11% of 13C15N-glycine was absorbed intact. 4Microbial C and N per unit soil volume were 1.7 and 5.4 times higher, respectively, than corresponding values for plant C and N. Plant incorporation of 15N tracer was 56%, 83% and 68% of the comparable incorporation by soil microorganisms of glycine, ammonium and nitrate ions, respectively. 5These results indicate that P. phryganodes can absorb amino acids intact from the soil despite competition from soil microorganisms, and that free amino acids may contribute substantially to N uptake in this important forage grass utilized by lesser snow geese in the coastal marsh. [source] Restoring Ecological Function to a Submerged Salt MarshRESTORATION ECOLOGY, Issue 2010Camille L. Stagg Impacts of global climate change, such as sea level rise and severe drought, have altered the hydrology of coastal salt marshes resulting in submergence and subsequent degradation of ecosystem function. A potential method of rehabilitating these systems is the addition of sediment-slurries to increase marsh surface elevation, thus ameliorating effects of excessive inundation. Although this technique is growing in popularity, the restoration of ecological function after sediment addition has received little attention. To determine if sediment subsidized salt marshes are functionally equivalent to natural marshes, we examined above- and belowground primary production in replicated restored marshes receiving four levels of sediment addition (29,42 cm North American Vertical Datum of 1988 [NAVD 88]) and in degraded and natural ambient marshes (4,22 cm NAVD 88). Moderate intensities of sediment-slurry addition, resulting in elevations at the mid to high intertidal zone (29,36 cm NAVD 88), restored ecological function to degraded salt marshes. Sediment additions significantly decreased flood duration and frequency and increased bulk density, resulting in greater soil drainage and redox potential and significantly lower phytotoxic sulfide concentrations. However, ecological function in the restored salt marsh showed a sediment addition threshold that was characterized by a decline in primary productivity in areas of excessive sediment addition and high elevation (>36 cm NAVD 88). Hence, the addition of intermediate levels of sediment to submerging salt marshes increased marsh surface elevation, ameliorated impacts of prolonged inundation, and increased primary productivity. However, too much sediment resulted in diminished ecological function that was equivalent to the submerged or degraded system. [source] Insect diversity and trophic structure differ on native and non-indigenous congeneric rushes in coastal salt marshesAUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2010KERINNE J. HARVEY Abstract Displacement of native plant species by non-indigenous congeners may affect associated faunal assemblages. In endangered salt marshes of south-east Australia, the non-indigenous rush Juncus acutus is currently displacing the native rush Juncus kraussii, which is a dominant habitat-forming species along the upper border of coastal salt marshes. We sampled insect assemblages on multiple plants of these congeneric rushes in coastal salt marshes in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, and compared the abundance, richness, diversity, composition and trophic structure between: (i) J. acutus and J. kraussii at invaded locations; and (ii) J. kraussii at locations either invaded or not invaded by J. acutus. Although J. acutus supported a diverse suite of insects, species richness and diversity were significantly greater on the native J. kraussii. Moreover, insect assemblages associated with J. kraussii at sites invaded by J. acutus were significantly different from, and more variable than, those on J. kraussii at non-invaded sites. The trophic structure of the insect assemblages was also different, including the abundance and richness of predators and herbivores, suggesting that J. acutus may be altering consumer interactions, and may be spreading in part because of a reduction in herbivory. This strongly suggests that J. acutus is not playing a functionally similar role to J. kraussii with respect to the plant-associated insect species assemblages. Consequently, at sites where this non-indigenous species successfully displaces the native congener, this may have important ecological consequences for community composition and functioning of these endangered coastal salt marshes. [source] |