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Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network

Coastal wetland responses to sea-level rise are greatly influenced by biogeomorphic processes that affect wetland surface elevation. Small changes in elevation relative to sea level can lead to comparatively large changes in ecosystem structure, function, and stability. The surface elevation table-m...

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Autores principales: Osland, Michael J., Griffith, Kereen T., Larriviere, Jack C., Feher, Laura C., Cahoon, Donald R., Enwright, Nicholas M., Oster, David A., Tirpak, John M., Woodrey, Mark S., Collini, Renee C., Baustian, Joseph J., Breithaupt, Joshua L., Cherry, Julia A., Conrad, Jeremy R., Cormier, Nicole, Coronado-Molina, Carlos A., Donoghue, Joseph F., Graham, Sean A., Harper, Jennifer W., Hester, Mark W., Howard, Rebecca J., Krauss, Ken W., Kroes, Daniel E., Lane, Robert R., McKee, Karen L., Mendelssohn, Irving A., Middleton, Beth A., Moon, Jena A., Piazza, Sarai C., Rankin, Nicole M., Sklar, Fred H., Steyer, Greg D., Swanson, Kathleen M., Swarzenski, Christopher M., Vervaeke, William C., Willis, Jonathan M., Wilson, K. Van
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5597133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28902904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183431
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author Osland, Michael J.
Griffith, Kereen T.
Larriviere, Jack C.
Feher, Laura C.
Cahoon, Donald R.
Enwright, Nicholas M.
Oster, David A.
Tirpak, John M.
Woodrey, Mark S.
Collini, Renee C.
Baustian, Joseph J.
Breithaupt, Joshua L.
Cherry, Julia A.
Conrad, Jeremy R.
Cormier, Nicole
Coronado-Molina, Carlos A.
Donoghue, Joseph F.
Graham, Sean A.
Harper, Jennifer W.
Hester, Mark W.
Howard, Rebecca J.
Krauss, Ken W.
Kroes, Daniel E.
Lane, Robert R.
McKee, Karen L.
Mendelssohn, Irving A.
Middleton, Beth A.
Moon, Jena A.
Piazza, Sarai C.
Rankin, Nicole M.
Sklar, Fred H.
Steyer, Greg D.
Swanson, Kathleen M.
Swarzenski, Christopher M.
Vervaeke, William C.
Willis, Jonathan M.
Wilson, K. Van
author_facet Osland, Michael J.
Griffith, Kereen T.
Larriviere, Jack C.
Feher, Laura C.
Cahoon, Donald R.
Enwright, Nicholas M.
Oster, David A.
Tirpak, John M.
Woodrey, Mark S.
Collini, Renee C.
Baustian, Joseph J.
Breithaupt, Joshua L.
Cherry, Julia A.
Conrad, Jeremy R.
Cormier, Nicole
Coronado-Molina, Carlos A.
Donoghue, Joseph F.
Graham, Sean A.
Harper, Jennifer W.
Hester, Mark W.
Howard, Rebecca J.
Krauss, Ken W.
Kroes, Daniel E.
Lane, Robert R.
McKee, Karen L.
Mendelssohn, Irving A.
Middleton, Beth A.
Moon, Jena A.
Piazza, Sarai C.
Rankin, Nicole M.
Sklar, Fred H.
Steyer, Greg D.
Swanson, Kathleen M.
Swarzenski, Christopher M.
Vervaeke, William C.
Willis, Jonathan M.
Wilson, K. Van
author_sort Osland, Michael J.
collection PubMed
description Coastal wetland responses to sea-level rise are greatly influenced by biogeomorphic processes that affect wetland surface elevation. Small changes in elevation relative to sea level can lead to comparatively large changes in ecosystem structure, function, and stability. The surface elevation table-marker horizon (SET-MH) approach is being used globally to quantify the relative contributions of processes affecting wetland elevation change. Historically, SET-MH measurements have been obtained at local scales to address site-specific research questions. However, in the face of accelerated sea-level rise, there is an increasing need for elevation change network data that can be incorporated into regional ecological models and vulnerability assessments. In particular, there is a need for long-term, high-temporal resolution data that are strategically distributed across ecologically-relevant abiotic gradients. Here, we quantify the distribution of SET-MH stations along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast (USA) across political boundaries (states), wetland habitats, and ecologically-relevant abiotic gradients (i.e., gradients in temperature, precipitation, elevation, and relative sea-level rise). Our analyses identify areas with high SET-MH station densities as well as areas with notable gaps. Salt marshes, intermediate elevations, and colder areas with high rainfall have a high number of stations, while salt flat ecosystems, certain elevation zones, the mangrove-marsh ecotone, and hypersaline coastal areas with low rainfall have fewer stations. Due to rapid rates of wetland loss and relative sea-level rise, the state of Louisiana has the most extensive SET-MH station network in the region, and we provide several recent examples where data from Louisiana’s network have been used to assess and compare wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise. Our findings represent the first attempt to examine spatial gaps in SET-MH coverage across abiotic gradients. Our analyses can be used to transform a broadly disseminated and unplanned collection of SET-MH stations into a coordinated and strategic regional network. This regional network would provide data for predicting and preparing for the responses of coastal wetlands to accelerated sea-level rise and other aspects of global change.
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spelling pubmed-55971332017-09-15 Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network Osland, Michael J. Griffith, Kereen T. Larriviere, Jack C. Feher, Laura C. Cahoon, Donald R. Enwright, Nicholas M. Oster, David A. Tirpak, John M. Woodrey, Mark S. Collini, Renee C. Baustian, Joseph J. Breithaupt, Joshua L. Cherry, Julia A. Conrad, Jeremy R. Cormier, Nicole Coronado-Molina, Carlos A. Donoghue, Joseph F. Graham, Sean A. Harper, Jennifer W. Hester, Mark W. Howard, Rebecca J. Krauss, Ken W. Kroes, Daniel E. Lane, Robert R. McKee, Karen L. Mendelssohn, Irving A. Middleton, Beth A. Moon, Jena A. Piazza, Sarai C. Rankin, Nicole M. Sklar, Fred H. Steyer, Greg D. Swanson, Kathleen M. Swarzenski, Christopher M. Vervaeke, William C. Willis, Jonathan M. Wilson, K. Van PLoS One Research Article Coastal wetland responses to sea-level rise are greatly influenced by biogeomorphic processes that affect wetland surface elevation. Small changes in elevation relative to sea level can lead to comparatively large changes in ecosystem structure, function, and stability. The surface elevation table-marker horizon (SET-MH) approach is being used globally to quantify the relative contributions of processes affecting wetland elevation change. Historically, SET-MH measurements have been obtained at local scales to address site-specific research questions. However, in the face of accelerated sea-level rise, there is an increasing need for elevation change network data that can be incorporated into regional ecological models and vulnerability assessments. In particular, there is a need for long-term, high-temporal resolution data that are strategically distributed across ecologically-relevant abiotic gradients. Here, we quantify the distribution of SET-MH stations along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast (USA) across political boundaries (states), wetland habitats, and ecologically-relevant abiotic gradients (i.e., gradients in temperature, precipitation, elevation, and relative sea-level rise). Our analyses identify areas with high SET-MH station densities as well as areas with notable gaps. Salt marshes, intermediate elevations, and colder areas with high rainfall have a high number of stations, while salt flat ecosystems, certain elevation zones, the mangrove-marsh ecotone, and hypersaline coastal areas with low rainfall have fewer stations. Due to rapid rates of wetland loss and relative sea-level rise, the state of Louisiana has the most extensive SET-MH station network in the region, and we provide several recent examples where data from Louisiana’s network have been used to assess and compare wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise. Our findings represent the first attempt to examine spatial gaps in SET-MH coverage across abiotic gradients. Our analyses can be used to transform a broadly disseminated and unplanned collection of SET-MH stations into a coordinated and strategic regional network. This regional network would provide data for predicting and preparing for the responses of coastal wetlands to accelerated sea-level rise and other aspects of global change. Public Library of Science 2017-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC5597133/ /pubmed/28902904 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183431 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Osland, Michael J.
Griffith, Kereen T.
Larriviere, Jack C.
Feher, Laura C.
Cahoon, Donald R.
Enwright, Nicholas M.
Oster, David A.
Tirpak, John M.
Woodrey, Mark S.
Collini, Renee C.
Baustian, Joseph J.
Breithaupt, Joshua L.
Cherry, Julia A.
Conrad, Jeremy R.
Cormier, Nicole
Coronado-Molina, Carlos A.
Donoghue, Joseph F.
Graham, Sean A.
Harper, Jennifer W.
Hester, Mark W.
Howard, Rebecca J.
Krauss, Ken W.
Kroes, Daniel E.
Lane, Robert R.
McKee, Karen L.
Mendelssohn, Irving A.
Middleton, Beth A.
Moon, Jena A.
Piazza, Sarai C.
Rankin, Nicole M.
Sklar, Fred H.
Steyer, Greg D.
Swanson, Kathleen M.
Swarzenski, Christopher M.
Vervaeke, William C.
Willis, Jonathan M.
Wilson, K. Van
Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title_full Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title_fullStr Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title_full_unstemmed Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title_short Assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast: Gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
title_sort assessing coastal wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise along the northern gulf of mexico coast: gaps and opportunities for developing a coordinated regional sampling network
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5597133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28902904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183431
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