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Integrated Marsh Management (IMM): a new perspective on mosquito control and best management practices for salt marsh restoration
Authors:Ilia Rochlin  Mary-Jane James-Pirri  Susan C Adamowicz  Roger J Wolfe  Paul Capotosto  Mary E Dempsey  Thomas Iwanejko  Dominick V Ninivaggi
Institution:1. Division of Vector Control, Suffolk County Department of Public Works, 335 Yaphank Avenue, Yaphank, NY, 11980, USA
2. Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI, 02882, USA
3. Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge, USFWS, Wells, ME, 04090, USA
4. Wetlands Habitat and Mosquito Management Program, Wildlife Division, Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, 391 Route 32, N. Franklin, CT, 06254, USA
5. Suffolk County Department of Environment and Energy, 335 Yaphank Avenue, Yaphank, NY, 11980, USA
Abstract:Salt marsh management often embraces diverse goals, ranging from the restoration of degraded marshes through re-introduction of tidal flow to the control of salt marsh mosquito production by altering marsh surface topography through Open Water Marsh Management (OMWM). However, rarely have these goals been incorporated in one project. Here we present the concept of Integrated Marsh Management (IMM), which combines the best management practices of salt marsh restoration and OMWM. Although IMM offers a comprehensive approach to ecological restoration and mosquito control, research evaluating this concept??s practical implementations has been inadequate. A long-term IMM project at Wertheim National Wildlife Refuge located in a highly urbanized watershed on Long Island, New York, USA was designed to fill this knowledge gap. A combination of restoration and OMWM techniques was employed at two treatment marshes, the results monitored before and after alterations, and compared to two adjacent control marshes. The treatment marshes experienced decreased mosquito production, reduced cover of the invasive common reed (Phragmites australis), expansion of native marsh vegetation, increased killifish and estuarine nekton species abundance, as well as increased avian species diversity and waterbird abundance. This demonstration project validated the IMM conceptual approach and may serve as a case study for similar IMM projects in the future.
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