Will a rising sea sink some estuarine wetland ecosystems?
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Date
2016
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Sea-level rise associated with climate change presents a major challenge to plant diversity and ecosystem service
provision in coastal wetlands. In this study, we investigate the effect of sea-level rise on benthos, vegetation, and
ecosystem diversity in a tidal wetland in west Wales, the UK. Present relationships between plant communities
and environmental variables were investigated through 50 plots at which vegetation (species and coverage), hydrological (surface or groundwater depth, conductivity) and soil (matrix chroma, presence or absence of mottles,
organic content, particle size) data were collected. Benthic communities were sampled at intervals along a continuum from saline to freshwater. To ascertain future changes to the wetlands' hydrology, a GIS-based empirical
model was developed. Using a LiDAR derived land surface, the relative effect of peat accumulation and rising sea
levels were modelled over 200 years to determine how frequently portions of the wetland will be inundated by
mean sea level, mean high water spring and mean high water neap conditions. The model takes into account
changing extents of peat accumulation as hydrological conditions alter.
Description
Keywords
Climate change, Geography, Ecosystems, Coastal wetland, Geoscience
Citation
Grenfell, S. E. et al. (2016). Will a rising sea sink some estuarine wetland ecosystems?. Science of the Total Environment, 554, 276-292. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.02.196