Salt Water Marshes: 2002 Publications
Author: Bertness,
M.D., Ewanchuk, P.J., and Silliman, B.R.
Title: Anthropogenic
modification of New England salt marsh landscapes.
Publication: Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences USA 99(3): 1395-1398, 2002.
© National Academy of Sciences
Notes: Salt
marshes play a critical role in the ecology and geology of wave-protected
shorelines in the Western Atlantic, but as many as 80% of the marshes that
once occurred in New England have already been lost to human development.
Here we present data that suggest that the remaining salt marshes in southern
New England are being rapidly degraded by shoreline development and eutrophication.
On the seaward border of these marshes, nitrogen eutrophication stimulated
by local shoreline development is shifting the competitive balance among marsh
plants by releasing plants from nutrient competition. This shift is leading
to the displacement of natural high marsh plants by low marsh cordgrass. On
the terrestrial border of these same marshes, shoreline development is also
precipitating the invasion of the common reed, Phragmites, by means of nitrogen
eutrophication caused by the removal of the woody vegetation buffer between
terrestrial and salt marsh communities. As a consequence of these human impacts,
traditional salt marsh plant communities and the plants and animals that are
dependent on these habitats are being displaced by monocultures of weedy species.
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