Declining hydrologic function of coastal wetlands in response to saltwater intrusion
Saverio Perri, Annalisa Molini

TL;DR
This study reveals that increased salinity from saltwater intrusion significantly impairs tidal wetlands' ability to regulate water tables, threatening their ecological function amid sea-level rise.
Contribution
It demonstrates that salinity, not just submersion, critically influences plant hydrologic function and water table control in coastal wetlands, challenging existing paradigms.
Findings
Salinity suppresses plant transpiration and water table regulation.
Salinization causes decoupling of plant hydraulics and groundwater dynamics.
Altered salinity regimes lead to shallow water tables and poor soil aeration.
Abstract
Salinity and submergence have shaped coastal wetlands into one of the most productive and yet fragile ecotones worldwide. Sea-level rise alters both salinity and submersion regimes, threatening the future existence of these habitats. Still, the magnitude of the impacts is elusive. A current paradigm is that coastal communities will keep pace with sea-level rise through soil accretion, a process largely sustained by the interaction of plants and geomorphology. This thesis, however, rests on the assumption that submersion is the main driver of bio-geomorphic processes and does not include the effects of salinity on plant hydrologic function. Here, we show that salinity has a major influence on how tidal vegetation controls the depth of the water table - a key ecohydrological process regulating plant establishment, survival rate, and productivity. Our findings rely on long-term…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamics · Plant responses to water stress
