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Geographic Variation in Salt Marsh Structure and Function for Nekton: a Guide to Finding Commonality Across Multiple Scales
被引:0
|作者:
Shelby L. Ziegler
Ronald Baker
Sarah C. Crosby
Denise D. Colombano
Myriam A. Barbeau
Just Cebrian
Rod M. Connolly
Linda A. Deegan
Ben L. Gilby
Debbrota Mallick
Charles W. Martin
James A. Nelson
James F. Reinhardt
Charles A. Simenstad
Nathan J. Waltham
Thomas A. Worthington
Lawrence P. Rozas
机构:
[1] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,Institute of Marine Sciences
[2] San Jose State University,Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
[3] University of South Alabama,Department of Marine Sciences
[4] Dauphin Island Sea Lab,Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
[5] Harbor Watch,Department of Biology
[6] Earthplace Inc.,Northern Gulf Institute
[7] University of California,Australian Rivers Institute – Coast & Estuaries, School of Environment and Science
[8] Berkeley,School of Science and Engineering
[9] University of New Brunswick,Nature Coast Biological Station
[10] Mississippi State University,Department of Biology
[11] Griffith University,School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences
[12] Woodwell Climate Research Center,Centre for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research (TropWATER)
[13] University of the Sunshine Coast,Conservation Science Group, Department of Zoology
[14] University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences,undefined
[15] University of Louisiana Lafayette,undefined
[16] NOAA Restoration Center,undefined
[17] University of Washington,undefined
[18] James Cook University,undefined
[19] University of Cambridge,undefined
[20] NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service (Retired),undefined
来源:
关键词:
Salt marshes;
Spatial scales;
Environmental drivers;
Global networks;
Open science;
D O I:
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学科分类号:
摘要:
Coastal salt marshes are distributed widely across the globe and are considered essential habitat for many fish and crustacean species. Yet, the literature on fishery support by salt marshes has largely been based on a few geographically distinct model systems, and as a result, inadequately captures the hierarchical nature of salt marsh pattern, process, and variation across space and time. A better understanding of geographic variation and drivers of commonalities and differences across salt marsh systems is essential to informing future management practices. Here, we address the key drivers of geographic variation in salt marshes: hydroperiod, seascape configuration, geomorphology, climatic region, sediment supply and riverine input, salinity, vegetation composition, and human activities. Future efforts to manage, conserve, and restore these habitats will require consideration of how environmental drivers within marshes affect the overall structure and subsequent function for fisheries species. We propose a future research agenda that provides both the consistent collection and reporting of sources of variation in small-scale studies and collaborative networks running parallel studies across large scales and geographically distinct locations to provide analogous information for data poor locations. These comparisons are needed to identify and prioritize restoration or conservation efforts, identify sources of variation among regions, and best manage fisheries and food resources across the globe.
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页码:1497 / 1507
页数:10
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