Science Inventory

Contributions of organic and inorganic matter to sediment volume and accretion in tidal wetlands at steady state

Citation:

Morris, J., D. Barber, J. Callaway, R. Chambers, S. Hagen, C. Hopkinson, B. Johnson, P. Megonigal, S. Neubauer, T. Troxler, AND C. Wigand. Contributions of organic and inorganic matter to sediment volume and accretion in tidal wetlands at steady state. Earth’s Future. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, 4(4):110-121, (2016).

Impact/Purpose:

This study supports research efforts in SHC 4.61, Integrated Solutions for Sustainable Communities, Task 6, Social-Ecological Systems for Resilience and Adaptive Management in Communities. Predicting responses of intertidal marshes to accelerating sea level will require predictive models to forecast system response. The model presented here, developed with organic matter and bulk density data assembled from sources across coastal regions of the conterminous US, helps understand and predict the limits of the biophysical processes that expand marsh soil volume and elevation.

Description:

A mixing model derived from first principles describes the bulk density (BD) of intertidal wetland sediments as a function of loss on ignition (LOI). The model assumes the bulk volume of sediment equates to the sum of self-packing volumes of organic and mineral components or BD = 1/[LOI/k1 + (1-LOI)/k2], where k1 and k2 are the self-packing densities of the pure organic and inorganic components, respectively. The model explained 78% of the variability in total BD when fitted to 5075 measurements drawn from 33 wetlands distributed around the conterminous United States. The values of k1 and k2 were estimated to be 0.085 ± 0.0007 g cm-3 and 1.99 ± 0.028 g cm-3, respectively. Based on the fitted organic density (k1) and constrained by primary production, the model suggests that the maximum steady state accretion arising from the sequestration of refractory organic matter is ≤ 0.3 cm yr-1. Thus, tidal peatlands are unlikely to survive indefinitely a higher rate of sea-level rise in the absence of a significant source of mineral sediment. Application of k2 to a mineral sediment load typical of East and eastern Gulf Coast estuaries gives a vertical accretion rate from inorganic sediment of 0.2 cm yr-1. Total steady state accretion is the sum of the parts and therefore should not be greater than 0.5 cm yr-1 under the assumptions of the model. Accretion rates could deviate from this value depending on variation in plant productivity, root:shoot ratio, suspended sediment concentration, sediment-capture efficiency, and episodic events.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:04/28/2016
Record Last Revised:07/29/2016
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 322513