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Dataset: Soil organic matter in fringing and meadow salt marshes in Great Bay, New Hampshire and southern Maine

dataset
posted on 2024-03-01, 16:53 authored by Pamela Morgan, David Burdick, Frederick Short

This study compared the functions and values of fringing salt marshes to those of meadow marshes along the southern Maine/New Hampshire coast. Differences included soil organic matter content, plant species richness, and percent cover of high and low-marsh species. More sediment was trapped per unit area in fringing marshes than in meadow marshes, but this difference was not significant. Similarities included aboveground and belowground peak season biomass and the ability to dampen wave energy. Both marsh types reduced the height of waves coming onto the marsh surface by 63% only 7 m into the marsh. Fringing marshes are diverse in terms of their physical characteristics (width, length, slope, elevation, soils). Despite their small size, they are valuable components of estuaries, performing many ecological functions to the same degree as nearby meadow marshes. More effort should be made to include them in regional efforts to conserve and restore coastal habitats.

Funding

University of New England

University of New Hampshire

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, grant or cooperative agreement no. NA77OR0235

Jackson Estuarine Laboratory contribution number 475

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    Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

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