Salt Water Marshes: 2004 Publications

Bauer, D.M., Cyr, N.E., and Swallow, S.K.  Public preferences for compensatory mitigation of salt marsh losses: a contingent choice of alternatives.  Conservation Biology 18(2): 401-411, 2004.

Bertness, M., Silliman, B., and Jeffries, R.  Salt marshes under siege.  American Scientist 92(1): 54, 2004.

Finke, D.L. and Denno, R.F.  Predator diversity dampens trophic cascades.  Nature 429(6990): 407-410, 2004.

Hood, W.G.  Indirect environmental effects of dikes on estuarine tidal channels: Thinking outside of the dike for habitat restoration and monitoring.  Estuaries 27(2): 273-282, 2004.

Hughes, R.C.  Climate change and loss of saltmarshes: consequences for birds.  Ibis 146(Suppl.1): 21-28, 2004.

Hughes, R.G. and Paramor, O.A.L.  On the loss of saltmarshes in south-east England and methods for their restoration.  Journal of Applied Ecology 41(3): 440-448, 2004.

Ko, J.-Y. and Day, J.W.  A review of ecological impacts of oil and gas development on coastal ecosystems in the Mississippi Delta.  Ocean and Coastal Management 47(11-12): 597-623, 2004.

McKee, K.L., Mendelssohn, I.A., and Materne, M.D.  Acute salt marsh dieback in the Mississippi River deltaic plain: a drought-induced phenomenon?  Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 13(1): 65-73, 2004.

Morris, R.K.A., Reach, I.S., Duffy, M.J., Collins, T.S., and Leafe, R.N.  On the loss of saltmarshes in south-east England and the relationship with Nereis diversicolor.  Journal of Applied Ecology 41(4): 787-791, 2004.

Paramor, O.A.L. and Hughes, R.G.  The effects of bioturbation and herbivory by the polychaete Nereis diversicolor on loss of saltmarsh in south-east England.  Journal of Applied Ecology 41(3): 449-463, 2004.

Sanger, D.M., Holland, A.F., and Gainey, C.  Cumulative impacts of dock shading on Spartina alterniflora in South Carolina estuaries.  Environmental Management 33(5): 741-748, 2004.

Silliman, B.R. and Bertness, M.D.  Shoreline development drives invasion of Phragmites australis and the loss of plant diversity on New England salt marshes.  Conservation Biology 18(5): 1424-1434, 2004.

Turner, R.E.  Coastal wetland subsidence arising from local hydrologic manipulations.  Estuaries 27(2): 265-272, 2004.

Valery, L., Bouchard, V., and Lefeuvre, J.C.  Impact of the invasive native species Elymus athericus on carbon pools in a salt marsh.  Wetlands 24(2): 268-276, 2004.

Valiela, I., Rutecki, D., and Fox, S.  Salt marshes: biological controls of food webs in a diminishing environment.  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 300(1-2): 131-159, 2004.

Zedler, J.B.  Compensating for wetland losses in the United States.  Ibis 146(Suppl.1): 92-100, 2004.

Zedler, J.B. and Kercher, S.  Causes and consequences of invasive plants in wetlands: Opportunities, opportunists, and outcomes.  Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 23(5): 431-452, 2004.