Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh

Disturbed salt marshes may recover with little additional management once tidal inundation is restored. We assessed the success of such recovery by comparing the invertebrate biota of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools in a reference site at Dipper Harbour to that of Saints Rest marsh that had been drain...

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Main Authors: Paula E. Noel, Bidhya Sharma, Gail L. Chmura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2023.994533/full
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author Paula E. Noel
Bidhya Sharma
Gail L. Chmura
author_facet Paula E. Noel
Bidhya Sharma
Gail L. Chmura
author_sort Paula E. Noel
collection DOAJ
description Disturbed salt marshes may recover with little additional management once tidal inundation is restored. We assessed the success of such recovery by comparing the invertebrate biota of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools in a reference site at Dipper Harbour to that of Saints Rest marsh that had been drained for over a century and to which tidal flooding had been returned ~50 years prior to our study. The sediments and vegetation of salt marsh pools were sampled seasonally throughout one year. Average biomass of pool invertebrates ranged from 1.8 to 4.0 g dry wt m−2, depending on the amount of vegetation cover in the pools. The most abundant organisms of the pools were the gastropod Ecrobia truncata (=Hydrobia tottentei), Tubificidae (=Naididae) oligochaetes, and Chironomidae (=Chironomini). We compared overall abundance and biomass of the invertebrates in the pool communities, assessing the month of sampling, pool elevation, and source marsh as explanatory variables. Our analyses revealed that marsh origin of pools seldom explained a significant amount of variance, and when it did, the proportion of variance explained was usually lower than elevation of pools and month of sampling. Diversity of invertebrates found in all pools was higher at the recovering site with species richness >40% higher than in the reference site. We conclude that after an estimated 50 years since dyke failure and return of tidal flooding to Saints Rest marsh, that the ecosystem function represented by pools and their fauna has recovered.
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spelling doaj.art-3991a130f0b149199bbc0525072069432023-08-21T15:44:08ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2023-08-011110.3389/fevo.2023.994533994533Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marshPaula E. NoelBidhya SharmaGail L. ChmuraDisturbed salt marshes may recover with little additional management once tidal inundation is restored. We assessed the success of such recovery by comparing the invertebrate biota of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools in a reference site at Dipper Harbour to that of Saints Rest marsh that had been drained for over a century and to which tidal flooding had been returned ~50 years prior to our study. The sediments and vegetation of salt marsh pools were sampled seasonally throughout one year. Average biomass of pool invertebrates ranged from 1.8 to 4.0 g dry wt m−2, depending on the amount of vegetation cover in the pools. The most abundant organisms of the pools were the gastropod Ecrobia truncata (=Hydrobia tottentei), Tubificidae (=Naididae) oligochaetes, and Chironomidae (=Chironomini). We compared overall abundance and biomass of the invertebrates in the pool communities, assessing the month of sampling, pool elevation, and source marsh as explanatory variables. Our analyses revealed that marsh origin of pools seldom explained a significant amount of variance, and when it did, the proportion of variance explained was usually lower than elevation of pools and month of sampling. Diversity of invertebrates found in all pools was higher at the recovering site with species richness >40% higher than in the reference site. We conclude that after an estimated 50 years since dyke failure and return of tidal flooding to Saints Rest marsh, that the ecosystem function represented by pools and their fauna has recovered.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2023.994533/fullinvertebrate diversityinvertebrate biomasssalt marsh restorationsalt marsh poolselevation gradient
spellingShingle Paula E. Noel
Bidhya Sharma
Gail L. Chmura
Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
invertebrate diversity
invertebrate biomass
salt marsh restoration
salt marsh pools
elevation gradient
title Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
title_full Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
title_fullStr Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
title_full_unstemmed Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
title_short Invertebrate communities of Bay of Fundy salt marsh pools: comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
title_sort invertebrate communities of bay of fundy salt marsh pools comparison of a natural and recovering marsh
topic invertebrate diversity
invertebrate biomass
salt marsh restoration
salt marsh pools
elevation gradient
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2023.994533/full
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