Abstract:
Monitoring salt marsh restoration sites is critical to the success of current and future projects but may also lead to costly projects. The distribution of vegetation across the marsh surface is highly influenced by soil salinity, duration of tidal flooding and competition between plant species. Focus has been placed on vegetation regeneration in post restoration activities and the role vegetation plays in sediment deposition within the Bay of Fundy. The influence that geodetic elevation has on the distribution of vegetation across the marsh has not been studied within restoration salt marshes in the Bay of Fundy. This study analyzes the relationship between vegetation community structure and geodetic elevation within restoration and reference macrotidal salt marshes in the Bay of Fundy.
This reseach was conducted within three newly restored salt marshes (and associated reference site(s)) in the upper Bay of Fundy currently being monitored as compensation projects. Dominant vegetation and geodetic elevation were determined at sampling stations arranged in transects running from the main tidal creek to the upland for each of the study sites in 2010. Five similar salt marsh species were found in both the reference and restoration sites. These included Carex paleacea , Juncus gerardii, Spartina patens, Spartina pectinata, and Spartina alterniflora. Of these five species, Juncus gerardii, Spartina pectinata, and Spartina alterniflora were found to have significantly different means and ranges of elevation within the restoration sites as compared to the reference sites. This is due to soil salinity, frequency and duration of inundation, and competition. All of these factors are influenced by geodetic elevation and length of time since beginning of restoration.