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Response and Recovery of Low-Salinity Marsh Plant Communities to Presses and Pulses of Elevated Salinity

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Abstract

In estuaries, future variation in sea level and river discharge will lead to saline intrusion into low-salinity tidal marshes. To investigate the processes that control the differential response and recovery of tidal freshwater marsh plant communities to saline pulses, a 3 × 5 factorial greenhouse experiment was conducted to examine the effects of a range of salinity levels (3, 5, and 10 practical salinity units (PSU)) and pulse durations (5, 10, 15, 20, and 30 days per month) on community composition of tidal freshwater marsh vegetation. Recovery of perturbed communities was also examined after 10 months. The results showed that community composition was increasingly affected by the more-saline and longer-duration treatments. The increasing suppression of salt-sensitive species resulted in species reordering, decreased species richness, and decreased aboveground biomass. Most of the plant species were able to recover from low-salinity, short-duration saline pulses in less than 1 year. However, because not all species recovered in the heavily salinized treatments, species richness at the end of the recovery period remained low for treatments that were heavily salinized during the treatment period. In contrast, plant aboveground biomass fully recovered in the heavily salinized treatments. Although the magnitude and duration of pulsed environmental changes had strong effects on community composition, shifts in community composition prevented long-term reductions in productivity. Thus, in this study system, environmental change affected species composition more strongly than it did ecosystem processes.

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Acknowledgements

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program under Grant No. OCE-1237140 and a Sigma Xi Grant-in-Aid-of-Research. We thank Wei-Ting Lin, Shanze Li, Jacob Shalack, Caroline Reddy, Dontrece Smith, Timothy Montgomery, Sasha Greenspan, Eric Weingarten, Narissa Turner, Jonathan Adams, and GCE-LTER Schoolyard participants for help with this project. This is contribution number 1074 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.

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FL and SCP conceived and designed the experiments. FL performed the experiments and analyzed the data. FL and SCP wrote the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Fan Li.

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Communicated by Carles Ibanez Marti

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Li, F., Pennings, S.C. Response and Recovery of Low-Salinity Marsh Plant Communities to Presses and Pulses of Elevated Salinity. Estuaries and Coasts 42, 708–718 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-018-00490-1

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