Analysis of tidal marsh vegetation patterns in two Georgia estuaries using aerial photography and GIS

被引:0
|
作者
Carrie B. Higinbotham
Merryl Alber
Alice G. Chalmers
机构
[1] University of Georgia,Department of Marine Sciences
[2] Post,undefined
[3] Buckley,undefined
[4] Schuh,undefined
[5] and Jernigan,undefined
来源
Estuaries | 2004年 / 27卷
关键词
Salt Marsh; Geographic Information System; River Estuary; Tidal Creek; Marsh Plant;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Aerial photographs and GIS analysis were used to map the distribution of tidal marsh vegetation along the salinity gradients of the estuaries of the Altamaha and Satilla Rivers in coastal Georgia. Vegetation maps were constructed from 1993 U.S. Geological Survey Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quads, 1∶77,000-scale color infrared photographs taken in 1974 and 1∶24,000-scale black and white photographs taken in 1953, Changes between years were identified using a GIS overlay analysis. Four vegetation classifications were identified and groundtruthed with field surveys: salt marsh (areas containing primarilySpartina alterniflora), brackish marsh (Spartina cynosuroides andS. alterniflora), Juncus (Juncus roemerianus), and fresh marsh (Zizania aquatica, Zizaniopsis miliacae, and others). There was no evidence for an upstream shift in marsh vegetation along the longitudinal axis of either estuary over the time frame of this analysis, which implies there has not been a long-term increase in salinity. Although the inland extent of each marsh zone was further upstream in the Satilla than the Altamaha, they corresponded to similar average high tide salinities in each estuary: areas classified as salt marsh occurred from the mouth up to where average high tide salinity in the water was approximately 15 psu;Juncus ranged from 21 to 1 psu; brackish marsh ranged from 15 to 1 psu; and fresh marsh was upstream of 1 psu. Approximately 63% of the 6,786 ha of tidal marsh vegetation mapped in the Altamaha and 75% of the 10,220 ha mapped in the Satilla remained the same in all 3 yr.Juncus was the dominant classification in the intermediate regions of both estuaries, and shifts between areas classified asJuncus and either brackish or salt marsh constituted the primary vegetation change between 1953 and 1993 (87% of the changes observed in the Altamaha and 95% of those in the Satilla). This analysis suggests that the broad distribution of tidal marsh vegetation along these two estuaries is driven by salinity, but that at the local scale these are dynamic systems with a larger number of factors affecting the frequently changing borders of vegetation patches.
引用
收藏
页码:670 / 683
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Tidal Marsh Inundation Index (TMII): An inundation filter to flag flooded pixels and improve MODIS tidal marsh vegetation time-series analysis
    O'Connell, Jessica L.
    Mishra, Deepak R.
    Cotten, David L.
    Wang, Li
    Alber, Merryl
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 201 : 34 - 46
  • [22] Analysis of Color Characteristics of Plants Using Aerial Photography
    Bure, Vladimir M.
    Mitrofanova, Olga A.
    [J]. 2017 CONSTRUCTIVE NONSMOOTH ANALYSIS AND RELATED TOPICS (DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF V.F. DEMYANOV) (CNSA), 2017, : 65 - 66
  • [23] Monitoring Geologic Hazards and Vegetation Recovery in the Wenchuan Earthquake Region Using Aerial Photography
    Li, Zhenwang
    Jiao, Quanjun
    Liu, Liangyun
    Tang, Huan
    Liu, Tong
    [J]. ISPRS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEO-INFORMATION, 2014, 3 (01) : 368 - 390
  • [24] Climate and Vegetation Change in a Coastal Marsh: Two Snapshots of Groundwater Dynamics and Tidal Flooding at Piermont Marsh, NY Spanning 20 Years
    Courtney, Sofi
    Montalto, Franco
    Watson, Elizabeth Burke
    [J]. WETLANDS, 2024, 44 (01)
  • [25] Climate and Vegetation Change in a Coastal Marsh: Two Snapshots of Groundwater Dynamics and Tidal Flooding at Piermont Marsh, NY Spanning 20 Years
    Sofi Courtney
    Franco Montalto
    Elizabeth Burke Watson
    [J]. Wetlands, 2024, 44
  • [26] Contrasting patterns of phytoplankton community pigment composition in two salt marsh estuaries in southeastern United States
    Noble, PA
    Tymowski, RG
    Fletcher, M
    Morris, JT
    Lewitus, AJ
    [J]. APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2003, 69 (07) : 4129 - 4143
  • [27] Remote Assessment of Factors Influencing Housing Thermal Efficiency in NSW Using GIS and Aerial Photography
    Whitsed, Rachel
    Davidson, Penny
    [J]. URBAN POLICY AND RESEARCH, 2013, 31 (04) : 473 - 492
  • [28] GIS ANALYSIS OF AERIAL-PHOTOGRAPHY AND SPOT SATELLITE DATA FOR LAND-DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
    JADKOWSKI, MA
    [J]. PAPERS FROM THE 1989 ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE URBAN AND REGIONAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS ASSOCIATION, VOL 2, 1989, : 117 - 126
  • [29] Evaluation of the topographic sheltering effects on the spatial pattern of Taiwan fir using aerial photography and GIS
    Huang, KY
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING, 2002, 23 (10) : 2051 - 2069
  • [30] How progressive vegetation die-off in a tidal marsh would affect flow and sedimentation patterns: A field demonstration
    Schepers, Lennert
    Van Braeckel, Alexander
    Bouma, Tjeerd J.
    Temmerman, Stijn
    [J]. LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2020, 65 (02) : 401 - 412