SALT-MARSH DEVELOPMENT STUDIES AT WAQUOIT BAY, MASSACHUSETTS - INFLUENCE OF GEOMORPHOLOGY ON LONG-TERM PLANT COMMUNITY STRUCTURE

被引:44
|
作者
ORSON, RA
HOWES, BL
机构
[1] WOODS HOLE OCEANOG INST,DEPT BIOL,WOODS HOLE,MA 02543
[2] WILLIAM PATERSON STATE COLL,DEPT GEOG & ENVIRONM SCI,WAYNE,NJ 07470
关键词
PALEOECOLOGY; GEOMORPHOLOGY; PLANT COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; NEW-ENGLAND COAST;
D O I
10.1016/S0272-7714(05)80025-3
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
Stochastic events relating to beach formation and inlet dynamics have been the major factors influencing the development of the Waquoit Bay tidal marshes. This results from the physical structure of the Waquoit Bay system where tidal exchange is limited to one or two small inlets and is in contrast to marsh development in nearby Barnstable Marsh where direct unrestricted exchange with Cape Cod Bay has smoothed the effects of stochastic events on vegetation development. We contend that vegetation development in salt marshes where connections to adjacent waters are restricted will be dominated by abiotic factors (e.g. storms, sedimentation rates, etc.) while those marshes directly linked to open bodies of water and where alterations to hydrodynamic factors are gradual, autecological processes (e.g. interspecific competition) will dominate long-term plant community development. The results from the five marsh systems within the Waquoit Bay complex suggest that once a vegetation change occurs the new community tended to persist for long periods of time (100's-1000's years). Stability of the 'new' community appeared to depend upon the stability of the physical structure of the system and/or time between perturbations necessary to allow the slower autecological processes to have a discernable effect. In order for the plant community to persist as long as observed, the vegetation must also be exerting an influence on the processes of development. Increased production of roots and rhizomes and growth characteristics (density of culms) are some of the factors which help to maintain long-term species dominance. It is clear from this investigation that the structure of the plant community at any one point in time is dependent upon numerous factors including historical developmental influences. To properly assess changes to the present plant community or determine recent rates of accretion, historic developmental trends must be considered. The factors that have influenced the development of marsh in the past will be important in understanding and formulating predictive models in the future. © 1992 Academic Press Limited.
引用
收藏
页码:453 / 471
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] LONG-TERM N-15-NITROGEN RETENTION IN THE VEGETATED SEDIMENTS OF A NEW-ENGLAND SALT-MARSH
    WHITE, DS
    HOWES, BL
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1994, 39 (08) : 1878 - 1892
  • [32] Assessing Long-Term Trends in Lateral Salt-Marsh Shoreline Change along a US East Coast Latitudinal Gradient
    Burns, Christine J.
    Alexander, Clark R.
    Alber, Merryl
    JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH, 2021, 37 (02) : 291 - 301
  • [33] Long-term plant community development as influenced by revegetation techniques
    Newman, GJ
    Redente, EF
    JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT, 2001, 54 (06): : 717 - 724
  • [34] Impacts of the long-term presence of buried crude oil on salt marsh soil denitrification in Barataria Bay, Louisiana
    Levine, Brian M.
    White, John R.
    DeLaune, Ronald D.
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2017, 99 : 454 - 461
  • [35] Decadal shifts in a salt marsh macroinfaunal community in response to sustained long-term experimental nutrient enrichment
    Sarda, R
    Valiela, I
    Foreman, K
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 1996, 205 (1-2) : 63 - 81
  • [36] Long-term Variation Characteristics of Zooplankton Community Structure in Meiliang Bay, Lake Taihu
    Yang J.
    Zhou J.
    Qin B.-Q.
    Quan Q.-M.
    Li Y.-X.
    Huanjing Kexue/Environmental Science, 2020, 41 (03): : 1246 - 1255
  • [37] ESTUARINE BENTHOS - LONG-TERM COMMUNITY STRUCTURE VARIATIONS, CORPUS CHRISTI BAY, TEXAS
    FLINT, RW
    YOUNK, JA
    ESTUARIES, 1983, 6 (02): : 126 - 141
  • [38] Long-term change in habitat and vegetation in an ungrazed, estuarine salt marsh: Man-made foreland compared to young marsh development
    Hartmann, Karina
    Stock, Martin
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2019, 227
  • [39] Long-term nutrient enrichment alters nematode trophic structure and body size in a Spartina alterniflora salt marsh
    Mitwally, Hanan M.
    Fleeger, John W.
    MARINE ECOLOGY-AN EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE, 2015, 36 (04): : 910 - 925
  • [40] Long-term effects of prairie restoration on plant community structure and native population dynamics
    Trowbridge, Charlotte C.
    Stanley, Amanda
    Kaye, Thomas N.
    Dunwiddie, Peter W.
    Williams, Jennifer L.
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2017, 25 (04) : 559 - 568