Different CO2exchange pathways were monitored for a year in short- and tall-formSpartina alternifloragrasses in a southeastern USA salt marsh at North Inlet, South Carolina. The tall form of grass growing close to a creek under favorable conditions reached a higher standing biomass than the short form of grass growing in the interior marsh. However, the photosynthetic parameters of both forms of grass were equivalent. The tall canopy had greater net canopy production, 973 versus 571 g C m−2year−1, canopy growth, 700 versus 131 g C m−2year−1, and canopy respiration, 792 versus 225 g C m−2year−1, but lower sediment respiration, 251 versus 392 g C m−2year−1. In a single growing season, tall-canopy biomass increased to intercept all the available solar radiation, which limits gross photosynthesis. Total respiration increased during the growing season in proportion to live biomass to a level that limited net production. Theoretically, the difference between net canopy production and canopy growth is carbon allocated to belowground growth and respiration. However, the computation of belowground production by this method was unrealistically low. This is important because carbon sequestration is proportional to belowground production and accounts for most of the vertical elevation gain of the marsh surface. Based on the allometry of standing live biomass, alternative estimates of belowground production were 927 and 193 g C m−2year−1in creekbank and interior marshes, which would yield gains in surface elevation of 0.2 and 0.04 cm/year, respectively. 
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                            Responses of Coastal Wetlands to Rising Sea-Level Revisited: The Importance of Organic Production
                        
                    
    
            Abstract A network of 15 Surface Elevation Tables (SETs) at North Inlet estuary, South Carolina, has been monitored on annual or monthly time scales beginning from 1990 to 1996 and continuing through 2022. Of 73 time series in control plots, 12 had elevation gains equal to or exceeding the local rate of sea-level rise (SLR, 0.34 cm/year). Rising marsh elevation in North Inlet is dominated by organic production and, we hypothesize, is proportional to net ecosystem production. The rate of elevation gain was 0.47 cm/year in plots experimentally fertilized for 10 years with N&P compared to nearby control plots that have gained 0.1 cm/year in 26 years. The excess gains and losses of elevation in fertilized plots were accounted for by changes in belowground biomass and turnover. This is supported by bioassay experiments in marsh organs where at age 2 the belowground biomass of fertilizedS. alternifloraplants was increasing by 1,994 g m−2 year−1, which added a growth premium of 2.4 cm/year to elevation gain. This was contrasted with the net belowground growth of 746 g m−2 year−1in controls, which can add 0.89 cm/year to elevation. Root biomass density was greater in the fertilized bioassay treatments than in controls, plateauing at about 1,374 g m−2and 472 g m−2, respectively. Growth of belowground biomass was dominated by rhizomes, which grew to 3,648 g m−2in the fertilized treatments after 3 years and 1,439 g m−2in the control treatments after 5 years. Depositional wetlands are limited by an exogenous supply of mineral sediment, whereas marshes like North Inlet could be classified as autonomous because they depend on in situ organic production to maintain elevation. Autonomous wetlands are more vulnerable to SLR because their elevation gains are constrained ultimately by photosynthetic efficiency. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 1654853
- PAR ID:
- 10486217
- Publisher / Repository:
- Springer Science + Business Media
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Estuaries and Coasts
- Volume:
- 47
- Issue:
- 7
- ISSN:
- 1559-2723
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: p. 1735-1749
- Size(s):
- p. 1735-1749
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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