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1 ing a nine-year CO2 xN experiment in a tidal marsh.
2 related to the density of vegetation on the marsh.
3 tion impacts of dominant consumers in a salt marsh.
4 ae than conspecifics in the surrounding salt marsh.
5 osystem services provided by Australia tidal marshes.
6 mangroves, including encroachment into salt marshes.
7 t facilitating ecosystem migration for tidal marshes.
8 ent channel networks than the vegetated salt marshes.
9 of nitrogen and other elements in intertidal marshes.
10 utrients and sediment between an estuary and marshes.
11 t increases with increasing latitude in salt marshes.
12 d: forested swamps and herbaceous-vegetation marshes.
13 sible for protection against edge erosion in marshes.
14 riments in European and North American tidal marshes.
15 ssed the three primary fates of N in a tidal marsh: (1) retention in plants and soil, (2) denitrifica
16 on flowed laterally both into and out of the marsh (108.3 +/- 5.4 and 86.2 +/- 10.5 g C m(-2) yr(-1)
17 ac disease was defined based on detection of Marsh 2 or greater lesions in biopsy specimens or persis
18 mangrove: 279.17, -67.33 to 72,867.83; salt marsh: 224.44, -92.60 to 94,129.68; seagrass: 64.80, 1.2
20 in 28,232 patients with CD (villous atrophy, Marsh 3) with that of 139,473 age- and sex-matched contr
22 n/high salinity), 417 +/- 70 Mg C/ha for low marsh, 551 +/- 47 Mg C/ha for high marsh, and 1,064 +/-
23 measured at multiple depths in a freshwater marsh, a brackish water lagoon, and a marine site, all l
24 ces of Pt and Os into the Tagus Estuary salt marshes: a regional input associated with industrial act
26 dings are applicable to large areas of tidal marsh along the U.S. Atlantic coast and in other urbaniz
27 rise will change inundation regimes in salt marshes, altering redox dynamics that control nitrificat
29 erature, and atmospheric CO(2) in a brackish marsh and found nonlinear and nonadditive feedbacks in p
30 very clear water, while the waters from the marsh and lagoon contained colored dissolved organic mat
31 Gross N2 O production was highest in the low marsh and lowest in the mid-marsh (P = 0.02), whereas gr
35 l, we contrasted denitrification capacity in marsh and subtidal sediments impacted by the Deepwater H
37 g a role in the recovery of New England salt marshes and assertions that invasive species can play po
38 While the effects of sea level rise on salt marshes and mangroves are well studied, we focus on its
39 lude estuarine and coastal wetlands, such as marshes and mangroves, sand beaches and dunes, seagrass
41 estimated flux was applied to present tidal marshes and planned marsh restorations throughout the Sa
42 sed an ecosystem service provided by coastal marshes and revealed that removal of smooth cordgrass si
43 iour of cranes foraging in Suaeda salsa salt marshes and S. salsa/Phragmites australis mosaic habitat
44 ges generally hasten edge erosion in coastal marshes and that the erosion protection function of wetl
45 a for low marsh, 551 +/- 47 Mg C/ha for high marsh, and 1,064 +/- 38 Mg C/ha for tidal forest (high e
46 vantage of prey entering the system from the marsh, and as such this may be an important resource for
47 roplastics in-wash and outflow from the salt marsh, and its relationship with tidal state and bulk su
48 describing CH(4) fluxes from mangrove, salt marsh, and seagrass ecosystems and discusses factors con
49 Together CH(4) emissions from mangrove, salt marsh, and seagrass ecosystems are about 0.33-0.39 Tmol
52 m carbon stocks (TECS) in seagrass, emergent marshes, and forested tidal wetlands, occurring along in
53 stal ecosystems (VCEs; i.e., mangroves, salt marshes, and seagrasses) play a critical role in global
62 ration is the primary process by which tidal marshes become perched high in the tidal frame, decreasi
63 each other to a large extent and led to the marsh being a CO2 sink in 2011 (-78.8 +/- 33.6 g C m(-2)
64 ded with a consistent stage of seasonal salt marsh biomass accumulation and with peak spring temperat
66 es the most comprehensive estimates of tidal marsh blue carbon in Australia, and illustrates their im
67 e, we determine the general response of salt marsh boundaries to wave action under normal and extreme
69 isation strongly increases herbivory in salt marshes, but not in mangroves, and that this effect incr
71 and uptake were observed in the low and high marshes, but the mid-marsh was consistently a net N2 O s
72 r results suggest that perturbations to salt marshes can drastically alter active microbial communiti
73 t practices at the upland periphery of tidal marshes can facilitate or impede ecosystem migration in
76 Here we show that nitrogen additions to salt marshes cause a shift in the active microbial community
77 ties with environmental conditions in a salt marsh chronosequence spanning 105 years of succession.
78 atients with CD were scored according to the Marsh classification and characterized for leukocyte inf
79 tological analysis of duodenal biopsies with Marsh classification, counting of lymphocytes per high-p
80 stribution of histology results according to Marsh classification: 1/8 M1, 2/8 M2, 3/8 M3a, 2/8 M3b.
83 l nitrate and higher ferrous iron in the low marsh compared to the mid and high marshes (P < 0.001 fo
84 ow that sediment budgets of eight microtidal marsh complexes consistently scale with areal unvegetate
85 Australia's 1.4 million hectares of tidal marshes contain an estimated 212 million tonnes of OC in
87 om a few sites suggested that oiling of salt marshes could lead to a biogeomorphic feedback where pla
88 eal that a historically innocuous grazer-the marsh crab Sesarma reticulatum-is rapidly reshaping the
91 ts in both Western and Eastern Atlantic salt marshes demonstrate, however, that a simple change in pl
93 Time series of aerial images of European marsh development reveal a consistent lengthening of rec
95 dence that predator depletion can cause salt marsh die-off by releasing the herbivorous crab Sesarma
97 lorida has shifted between mangrove and salt marsh dominance at least 6 times between the late 1700s
100 grove habitat, the suboptimal colonized salt marsh ecosystem, and on docks within the marsh, an artif
105 iwinkles were reduced by 80-90% at the oiled marsh edge and by 50% in the oiled marsh interior ( appr
107 yses revealed a threshold for oil impacts on marsh edge erosion, with higher erosion rates occurring
110 (USA) we show that species composition from marsh edge to interior is driven by gradients in wave st
112 nd being invaded was lawn or wooded, but the marsh-edge plant communities that developed in these two
113 urbances that generate plant die-off on salt marsh edges generally hasten edge erosion in coastal mar
115 surements of gross N2 O fluxes across a salt marsh elevation gradient to determine how soil N2 O emis
116 tween mussels and dominant cordgrass in salt marshes enhance ecosystem resistance to and recovery fro
119 We apply our general formulation for salt marsh erosion to historical wave climates at eight salt
122 cluding organic matter and nutrient cycling, marsh-estuarine food chains, and multiple species that p
125 experiments revealed that in protected salt marshes experiencing a severe drought, plant-eating graz
127 ing dynamic, landscape-scale changes in salt-marsh geomorphic evolution, spatial organization, and sp
128 ned regional surveys of southeastern US salt marsh geomorphology and invertebrate communities with a
135 r vegetation to represent a heavily impacted marsh habitat, with unoiled vertical structure at one en
138 t within each marsh (which creates different marsh habitats); and (iii) different life history stages
139 White stork (Ciconia ciconia) and western marsh harrier (Circus aeruginosus) were the most contami
140 nt elevation dynamics in mangroves and tidal marshes has been gained by monitoring a wide range of di
142 tention on a decadal timescale because tidal marshes have a relatively open N cycle and can accrue so
145 that predators are important determinants of marsh health in New England, we performed a total predat
146 most frequently flooded islands, while salt marsh herbs and shrubs replaced forest understory vegeta
148 ed CD (villous atrophy, histopathology stage Marsh III) through biopsy-reports from Sweden's 28 patho
149 llected from a barrier island and a brackish marsh in southeast Louisiana over a period of 881 days.
150 cores 18-36 months after the accident at the marshes in Bay Jimmy (Upper Barataria Bay), Louisiana, U
151 samples from each of three tidal freshwater marshes in estuaries at three latitudes (north, middle,
152 mpare the channel networks of vegetated salt marshes in Massachusetts and the Venice Lagoon to unvege
153 e current ecotone between mangroves and salt marshes in northeast Florida has shifted between mangrov
155 cted during May-October, 2013 from four salt marshes in Waquoit Bay and adjacent estuary, Massachuset
156 the oiled marsh edge and by 50% in the oiled marsh interior ( approximately 9 m inland) compared to r
157 atest numerical losses of periwinkles in the marsh interior, where densities were naturally higher.
158 from physical and biotic stress in the salt marsh intertidal and reduces Sesarma functional density
159 wing conversion of Phragmites australis salt marsh into fishpond, wheat and rapeseed fields and town
165 Here we present food web data from 115 salt marsh islands and show that network structure is associa
166 tive to nongrazed creekheads, have increased marsh-landscape drainage density by 8 to 35% across the
168 on to historical wave climates at eight salt marsh locations affected by hurricanes in the United Sta
173 rve vegetated coastal ecosystems (VCE; tidal marshes, mangroves and seagrasses) to mitigate greenhous
174 ngrove shrubs and trees into herbaceous salt marshes may represent a substantial change in ecosystem
175 may not interest enough landowners to allow marsh migration at the spatial scales needed to mitigate
177 tation appeared to be a leading indicator of marsh migration, while soil characteristics such as redo
180 cades, mangroves have rapidly displaced salt marshes near multiple poleward mangrove range limits, in
183 he second compared the areas covered by each Marsh-Oberhuber grade and expressed as percentages, the
185 : the first was represented by the classical Marsh-Oberhuber score, the second compared the areas cov
186 logical and geochemical variables in a tidal marsh of the Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve to deter
188 s americanus and Spartina patens) in coastal marshes of North America and has potential to dramatical
191 at create low-energy environments where salt marshes, oyster reefs, and mangroves can develop and sur
193 ghest in the low marsh and lowest in the mid-marsh (P = 0.02), whereas gross N2 O consumption did not
196 This study determined the effects of oil on marsh periwinkle movement and survivorship following exp
197 in field surveys, these results suggest that marsh periwinkle snails may have been adversely affected
201 concentration was best explained by shallow marsh plant species identity (14.9%) and wetland depth (
202 Detection was best explained by shallow marsh plant species identity (34.8%) and surrounding cro
206 vestigate the possibility that sharks fed on marsh prey, we modelled the predicted dynamics of stable
211 ently scale with areal unvegetated/vegetated marsh ratios (UVVR) suggesting these metrics are broadly
214 ward in a dynamic equilibrium, where the low marsh replaces the high marsh ridge community and the hi
215 heric CO2, but their relative importance for marsh resilience to increasing RRSLR remains unclear.
219 explicit ecomorphodynamic model, we explore marsh responses to increased atmospheric CO2, relative t
220 applied to present tidal marshes and planned marsh restorations throughout the San Francisco Estuary.
222 imulated disturbance) along the edge of salt marshes reveals that loss of wetland plants elevates the
223 brium, where the low marsh replaces the high marsh ridge community and the high marsh ridge community
224 the high marsh ridge community and the high marsh ridge community replaces the mid-marsh grasses on
227 rs, histopathology according to the modified Marsh scale, and CD risk gradient based on HLA type, usi
229 nominal p=0.18); the difference in change in Marsh score from baseline was 0.09% (95% CI -1.60-1.90;
230 rticipants with duodenal histology who had a Marsh score of greater than 1 were discontinued before d
231 duodenal or jejunal villous atrophy (stage 3 Marsh score), were matched with as many as 5 randomly se
232 o; VHCD); intraepithelial lymphocyte counts; Marsh score; and patient-reported symptom measures, incl
235 'blue carbon' habitats (mangroves and tidal marshes) seagrasses are thought to provide coastal defen
243 els of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, and some marsh shorelines experienced heavy oiling including vege
245 nd thresholds in this effect across 103 salt marsh sites spanning ~430 kilometers of shoreline in coa
246 a irrorata) density and shell length at salt marsh sites with heavy oiling to reference conditions ap
247 ive influence on elevation, while other salt marsh species (e.g. Suaeda maritima) had no influence or
248 diment deposition are necessary for the high marsh species to outcompete the mid-marsh grasses during
249 2), and 3719 individuals with normal mucosa (Marsh stage 0) but positive CD serologic test results (I
250 dividuals with CD (equal to villous atrophy, Marsh stage 3), 12,304 individuals with inflammation (Ma
251 pathology data on 2,933 individuals with CD (Marsh stage 3; villous atrophy) to the Swedish Prescribe
252 normal range, normal duodenal architecture (Marsh stages 0-1) in 5 biopsies, and HLA DQ2- or DQ8-pos
254 ge 3), 12,304 individuals with inflammation (Marsh stages 1-2), and 3719 individuals with normal muco
255 addition, we found that different aspects of marsh structure and function migrated at different rates
256 it increases the threshold RRSLR initiating marsh submergence by up to 60% in the range of forcings
257 pounded, drained and tidally-restricted salt marshes, substantial methane (CH4) and CO2 emission redu
259 l accretion, increasing tidal submergence of marsh surfaces, particularly where creeks exhibit morpho
261 sub)tropical and temperate seagrass and salt marsh systems demonstrate greatly enhanced yields when i
263 nk berry' consortia of the Sippewissett Salt Marsh through an integrative study at the microbial scal
264 te conditions in the last 3 years turned the marsh to a source of carbon (42.7 +/- 23.4 g C m(-2) yr(
265 oducing, rather than consuming, N2 O in salt marshes to improve our predictions of changes in net N2
268 drologic, edaphic, and biotic sampling along marsh-to-upland transects in both wooded and lawn enviro
272 marsh migration in a Long Island Sound salt marsh using detailed hydrologic, edaphic, and biotic sam
273 ge in intact mixed-species blocks of UK salt marsh using six open-top chambers receiving CO2 -enriche
274 es of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) in coastal salt marshes using dimensional analysis method from fluid mec
275 interactions between black mangrove and salt marsh vegetation along the Texas coast varied across (i)
276 However, in the Gulf of Mexico, the loss of marsh vegetation because of human-driven disturbances su
277 ance of nirS-type denitrifers indicated that marsh vegetation regulates the activity, rather than the
279 derived (0-40 cm, active root zone of native marsh vegetation), and deep SOM-derived mineralization (
280 which was characterized by an extensive salt marsh vegetation, the mats contained a distinct bacteria
281 e Florida Everglades with different spatial (marsh versus estuarine) and temporal (wet versus dry sea
282 l rise in recent decades has widely outpaced marsh vertical accretion, increasing tidal submergence o
285 mulation in the sediments suggested that the marsh was a long-term carbon sink and accumulated ~96.9
287 sence of colored dissolved organic matter in marsh water enhanced photoinactivation of a laboratory s
288 s are predicted to increase hydroperiods and marsh water levels, likely shifting the timing, duration
289 e mangroves are expanding and replacing salt marsh, wetland capacity to respond to sea-level rise may
291 e first full carbon balance for a freshwater marsh where vertical gaseous [carbon dioxide (CO2 ) and
292 ); (ii) the elevational gradient within each marsh (which creates different marsh habitats); and (iii
294 in the vertical adjustment of European salt marshes, which are primarily minerogenic in composition,
295 ive in a time of rapid sea-level rise, tidal marshes will need to migrate upslope into adjacent uplan
296 age reduction in annual flood losses by salt marshes with higher reductions at lower elevations.
297 nic activity have been retained in the Hythe marsh, with (137)Cs and Cu depth profiles showing retent
298 n, subsidence), mangrove replacement of salt marsh, with or without disturbance, will not necessarily
299 ncentrations in blood, feathers, and eggs of marsh wrens in wetlands of Great Salt Lake, Utah, and, a
300 Net N2 O fluxes differed significantly among marsh zones (P = 0.009), averaging 9.8 +/- 5.4 mug N m(-