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Predicting Carbon and Nutrient Transformations in Tidal Freshwater Wetlands of the Hudson River
Authors:Alicia Arrigoni  Stuart Findlay  David Fischer  Klement Tockner
Institution:(1) Swiss Federal Institute for Aquatic Science and Technology (EAWAG), Box 611, 8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland;(2) Department of Geosciences, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812, USA;(3) Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Box AB, Millbrook, New York 12545, USA;(4) Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB), Mueggelseedamm 310, 12587 Berlin, Germany;(5) Institute of Biology, Free University Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Abstract:The exchange of water between the main channel of the tidal freshwater Hudson River and its tidal wetlands is a large proportion of the whole-river water volume and causes large changes in concentrations of some dissolved and suspended constituents. Ten representative wetlands were assessed for their ability to alter quantities of inorganic nutrients, suspended particles, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and dissolved oxygen during tidal exchange. The majority of sites acted as sinks for oxygen and nitrate and as sources of DOC. For other variables such as phosphate and pigments, individual wetlands varied broadly in both the direction and magnitude of change. For some variables (oxygen, DOC) we found mechanistically plausible predictors for the magnitude of alteration. The proportional coverage of submerged vegetation or intertidal marsh graminoid vegetation was related to the degree of change in oxygen and DOC. For most cases, however, we did not find strong predictors and we attribute this to the spatial positioning of “hot spots” or redundancy in the processes actually responsible for the transformation. Our ability to predict ecosystem performance from whole-ecosystem attributes may be impeded by lack of consideration of within-system spatial contingencies or lack of knowledge of which process is actually responsible for the observed alteration in material flux.
Keywords:ecosystem process  environmental heterogeneity  retention  tidal marsh  nutrients  dissolved organic carbon  dissolved oxygen
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