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The Role of Soil Organic Carbon in Maintaining Surface Elevation in Rapidly Subsiding U.S. Gulf of Mexico Coastal Marshes
Authors:DeLaune  R.D.  Pezeshki  S.R.
Affiliation:(1) Wetland Biogeochemistry Institute, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803, U.S.A. (author for correspondence;(2) Department of Biology, University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.A
Abstract:Subsidence is a primary factor governing marsh deterioration in Mississippi River deltaic plain coastal marshes. Marsh surface-water level relationships are maintained primarily through soil organic matter accumulation and inorganic sediment input. In this study we examined the role of soil organic matter accumulation in maintaining marsh elevation in a brackish Spartina patens marsh. Measured rates of soil organic accumulation were compared to plant biomass production and soil respiration (carbon dioxide and methane emission) at the study sites. The study demonstrated the importance of plant biomass production to soil organic carbon accumulation in maintaining viable Spartina patens marshes in sediment-deficient coastal environments. The role of Mississippi River freshwater reintroduction in maintaining conditions for organic accretion is discussed.
Keywords:carbon budget  coastal wetlands  marsh accretion  plant productivity  saltwater intrusion  Spartina  subsidence
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