Climate Change: 2001
Publications
Author: Donnelly,
J.P. and Bertness, M.D.
Title:
Rapid shoreward encroachment
of salt marsh cordgrass in response to accelerated sea-level rise.
Publication: Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences USA 98(25): 14218-14223, 2001.
© National Academy of Sciences
Notes :The
distribution of New England salt marsh communities is intrinsically linked
to the magnitude, frequency, and duration of tidal inundation. Cordgrass (Spartina
alterniflora) exclusively inhabits the frequently flooded lower
elevations, whereas a mosaic of marsh hay (Spartina patens), spike grass (Distichlis spicata), and black rush (Juncus gerardi) typically dominate higher elevations. Monitoring
plant zonal boundaries in two New England salt marshes revealed that low-marsh
cordgrass rapidly moved landward at the expense of higher-marsh species between
1995 and 1998. Plant macrofossils from sediment cores across modern plant
community boundaries provided a 2,500-year record of marsh community composition
and documented the migration of cordgrass into the high marsh. Isotopic dating
revealed that the initiation of cordgrass migration occurred in the late 19th
century and continued through the 20th century. The timing of the initiation
of cordgrass migration is coincident with an acceleration in the rate of sea-level
rise recorded by the New York tide gauge. These results suggest that increased
flooding associated with accelerating rates of sea-level rise has stressed
high-marsh communities and promoted landward migration of cordgrass. If current
rates of sea-level rise continue or increase slightly over the next century,
New England salt marshes will be dominated by cordgrass. If climate warming
causes sea-level rise rates to increase significantly over the next century,
these cordgrass-dominated marshes will likely drown, resulting in extensive
losses of coastal wetlands.
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