The Secret Life of Tidal Marshes and Mangroves: Camera Trapping as a Window Into Wildlife Using North American Coastal Wetlands
Kenneth B. Raposa, Kimberly Cressman, Danika vanProosdij, Jason Goldstein, Rachel A. Stevens, Megan Tyrrell, Brian DeGasperis, Kari St. Laurent, R. Kyle Derby, Scott Lerberg, Elizabeth Fox Pinnix, Jennifer Plunkett, Jessica Kinsella, Colby Peffer, Candace Killian, Jay Black

TL;DR
This study shows that North American coastal wetlands are vital for wildlife, using camera traps to document species diversity and behavior.
Contribution
The first coordinated assessment of terrestrial wildlife use in North American coastal wetlands using a consistent methodology.
Findings
146 species, including 104 birds, 36 mammals, and 6 herpetofauna, were documented using coastal wetlands.
Wetlands with greater landscape heterogeneity and ecotones attracted unique wildlife assemblages.
Mammals predominantly used wetlands at night, and wildlife abundance was low during flooding.
Abstract
The crucial role of coastal wetlands supporting diverse terrestrial wildlife is often asserted but has not been demonstrated in broad‐scale field evaluations; a comprehensive assessment of wildlife use of these vital ecosystems is therefore needed. Our goal was to conduct the first coordinated assessment of terrestrial wildlife across North America's vegetated coastal wetlands. We elucidated spatial patterns related to geographic and landscape differences and temporal patterns of wildlife diversity and abundance. Using camera traps deployed with a consistent methodology across 25 National Estuarine Research Reserves and 7 additional sites in North America, we documented 146 species (104 birds, 36 mammals, 6 herpetofauna) using wetlands for foraging, resting, and as nursery habitat. Most species were native, though non‐native species dominated island sites. Wetlands with greater…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Rangeland and Wildlife Management · Coastal wetland ecosystem dynamics
