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Spatial and temporal variations in sediment composition within newly restored salt marshes
Rogers, Elise
Date: 2021
Type: Text
Abstract:
Salt marsh ecosystems are highly vulnerable to climate change and sea-level rise. Adaptation
strategies such as managed realignment, or dyke realignment, allow for the growth of new salt
marsh in areas where one had been previously destroyed through dyking by historical settlers.
Two newly restored salt marshes in the Bay of Fundy were monitored through this study. The
spatial and temporal variations in water content, organic matter content, organic carbon content
and sediment grain size were examined across the salt marsh surfaces. This study found that
newly restored salt marshes in the Bay of Fundy can sequester carbon immediately after
restoration. Carbon sequestration values resemble those in previously restored marshes in the
surrounding areas. This study determined that there is a spatial variation in sediment
characteristics across the salt marsh surface. This spatial variation is tied to varying elevation
within the tidal frame. Spatial variations of sediment characteristics are not exclusively consistent
over time but do tend to follow the same patterns. The sediment characteristics measured at both
newly restored salt marshes used in this study were compared to previously restored salt marshes
in Nova Scotia. All sediment characteristics data falls within similar ranges, creating a better
understanding of what sediment characteristics to expect when restoring a salt marsh in the Bay of Fundy.