scholarly journals Biodiversity impacts by multiple anthropogenic stressors in Mediterranean coastal wetlands

Author(s):  
Claudia Martínez-Megías ◽  
Andreu Rico
Wetlands ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 775-785 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xavier Benito ◽  
Rosa Trobajo ◽  
Carles Ibáñez

2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (7) ◽  
pp. 1615-1631 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Emma Huertas ◽  
Susana Flecha ◽  
Jordi Figuerola ◽  
Eduardo Costas ◽  
Edward P. Morris

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1190
Author(s):  
Inmaculada Rodríguez-Santalla ◽  
Nuria Navarro

Coastal wetlands are dynamic ecosystems that exist at the interface between land and sea. They represent environments with a great diversity of habitats and communities, high carbon sequestration capacity and a wide range of ecosystem services. In the Mediterranean, the largest coastal wetlands are found in deltaic areas like that of the Ebro River (Spain), which has a coastline length of approximately 50 km, occupying a total area of 325 km2. The Ebro Delta is included in different national and international frameworks for environmental conservation, despite which there are several risks that threaten it. The lack of sedimentary contributions due to the regulation of the Ebro riverbed (irrigation, reservoirs, and hydroelectric power generation) has caused erosion and the retreat of certain sections of its coastline. To this situation of sediment deficit must be added the threat posed by the effects of global change, such as the rise in sea level, the increase in temperature and in the frequency and intensity of storms. This study analyses the particularities of the coastal wetland of the Ebro Delta, identifying the main threats it faces, as well as possible adaptation and mitigation strategies to these changes.


Author(s):  
Lauris O. Hollis ◽  
R. Eugene Turner

AbstractCoastal wetlands may be subjected to numerous biotic and abiotic stressors from natural and anthropogenic forces in the landscape. The influx of nutrients, inorganic compounds and xenobiotics are suspected of degrading the belowground biomass of coastal macrophytes. Spartina patens acts as an ecosystem engineer for lower salinity coastal marshes and its biomechanical properties are vital to the stability and resilience of coastal wetlands. S.patens was exposed to one natural (flooding) and two anthropogenic stressors (atrazine and nutrient addition) in a greenhouse experiment to test the hypothesis that these three stressors reduce the tensile root strength of S. patens. A one-way Welch’s analysis of variance revealed that the tensile root strength S. patens significantly declined after exposure to two flood duration regimes, three levels of atrazine exposure, and two levels of nutrient addition that consisted of nitrogen-phosphorus combinations. A one-way ANOVA of tensile root strength with an atrazine-flood duration-nutrient addition combination treatment as the main effect resulted in a 52 to 63% loss in tensile strength, while the individual atrazine, flooding, and nutrient treatments produced 40, 39, and 37% losses in tensile root strength, respectively. These results indicate that the effects of multiple natural and/or anthropogenic stressors may degrade the tensile root strength of S. patens, which could facilitate coastal erosion and subsequent collapse of the wetland ecosystem.


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