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CESN Main PageCoastal & Estuarine Science News (CESN)Coastal & Estuarine Science News (CESN) is an electronic publication providing brief summaries of select articles from the journal Estuaries & Coasts that emphasize management applications of scientific findings. It is a free electronic newsletter delivered to subscribers on a bimonthly basis. September 2010ContentsResisting Phragmites Invasions: Diverse Native Plant Assemblages Might Help Resisting Phragmites Invasions: Diverse Native Plant Assemblages Might HelpAs Phragmites australis continues to invade North American marshes, managers are often faced with the Sisiphysian task of curbing the plant’s expansion and restoring invaded marshes. However, there is some indication that competition with native species reduces the success of Phragmites, and that in general the diversity of native competitors plays a critical role in the success of invading species A recent experimental study in a New Hampshire salt marsh explored this possibility. Investigators planted experimental plots with Phragmites shoots alone, Phragmites and one native plant species, and Phragmites and four native species. Conditions at the field site were considered conducive to the establishment of Phragmites (restricted tidal flushing, located near residential and road development). Modeling Past, Present, and Future Nitrogen in Narragansett BayThe reduction of nitrogen (N) loading in order to address eutrophication and its associated ecosystem impacts is a common management goal for North American estuaries. In evaluating policy options for managing N and developing insight into N dynamics in a given system, it is helpful to understand current and historic spatial loading patterns. In a study of Narragansett Bay, RI, researchers used data on population, human waste disposal, livestock, fertilizer, and atmospheric deposition to determine N inputs to the bay for 1850-2000. Model results indicate that total N loads to the bay increased by 250% from 1850 to 2000, and 80% from 1900 to 2000. Dominant N sources shifted from non-point animal waste to human waste from sewage treatment facilities. Increases in N loading to the upper bay were much greater than those to the lower bay, primarily due to the growth of sewage systems serving populations in the upper bay watershed, including Providence, RI and Fall River and Worcester, MA. EXPO’98 Improvements in Portugal Estuary Stick Around After the Fair is Long GoneThe theme of the special World’s Fair in Lisbon in 1998 (EXPO’98) was “The Oceans, a Heritage for the Future,” so it was entirely fitting that in addition to the buildings, pavilions, and metro stations constructed for the fair, sewage treatment and other improvements were undertaken to clean up the Tagus estuary. A long-term monitoring program tracked intertidal and subtidal benthic communities at sites near the EXPO’98 site for more than ten years (1996-2007), and found that measures of benthic community health improved along with water quality. Bringing Back the Oyster: Sometimes Impacts Can Be Hard to SeeEfforts along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts to restore depleted estuarine oyster populations have taken off in recent years, and everyone has a reason for wanting the bivalve back. They’re good to eat (for humans and others), they support economic activities, they are ecosystem engineers that create habitat for lots of other organisms, and, importantly, they can filter prodigious quantities of particulates from the water column, leading to improvements in water quality. However, this last function has not always been demonstrated effectively in the field. Along the Gulf coast, researchers undertook a study in conjunction with the Alabama Oyster Reef Restoration Project to assess the impact of restored eastern oyster reefs on primary production, nutrient dynamics, and water quality in shallow tidal creeks. The investigators looked at these factors in sediment and water in paired creeks (with and without restored oyster beds) over the course of two years post-restoration. Despite the investigators’ expectations, oyster presence only affected sediment chlorophyll a and water column nutrient concentration, and results were inconsistent across sites. Oyster reefs did not seem to reduce water-column particulates or affect phytoplankton biomass or productivity. |