Skip to main content

The dilution and loss of wetland function associated with conversion to open water

Abstract

Some degree of wetland loss characterizes most coastal systems of the United States. This loss is generally reported as a decrease in wetland area, but most coastal land loss entails wetland submergence and conversion to open water. This concurrent increase in the area of aquatic habitat decreases the wetland:open water ratio, effectively diluting the area of remaining wetland relative to the aquatic system. The functional loss of intertidal wetlands to the ecosystem associated with this dilution effect may significantly alter ecological functions dependent on the interactive coupling of wetland and aquatic habitats. The magnitude of functional loss is strongly dependent on the wetland:water ratio of an estuary. In estuaries with open bay-type morphologies, the open water area is already large and functional loss of wetland by additional dilution may be only slightly greater than the areal wetland loss. Where estuaries are wetland-dominated, however, conversion of even a small percentage of wetland to water drastically alters the wetland:water ratio. In these cases, functional losses by dilution are much greater than the rate of areal wetland loss.

In the Barataria Basin estuary, Louisiana, between 1967 and 1987, 15.4% of the salt marsh was lost (assuming a loss rate of 0.8% y−1 of the remaining marsh). We estimated that this 15% loss of salt marsh, by conversion to open water, may have resulted in a 27% reduction in the supply of inorganic nutrients and organic matter to the estuarine water column by the marsh, simply due to the dilution effects of the changed wetland:open water ratio. Functional losses of this magnitude may have serious implications to the estuarine ecosystem where intertidal wetlands support aquatic productivity by exporting nutrients and energy or where intertidal wetlands buffer aquatic eutrophication by importing excess nutrients and organic matter. It is conceivable that an estuary characterized by wetland loss may reach a point where, although some wetland remains, its functional value to the ecosystem is essentially gone.

This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.

Literature cited

  • Baumann, R.H., Day, J.W., Jr. and Miller, C.A. 1984. Mississippi deltaic wetland survival: Sedimentation versus coastal submergence. Science 224: 1093–1095.

    Google Scholar 

  • Boesch, D.F. and Turner, R.E. 1984. Dependence of fishery species on salt marshes: The role of food and refuge. Estuaries 7(4A): 460–468.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bowden, W.B. 1986. Nitrification, nitrate reduction, and nitrogen immobilization in a tidal fresh-to-brackish marsh sediment. Ecology 67(1): 88–99.

    Google Scholar 

  • Chalmers, A.G., Wiegert, R.G. and Wolf, P.L. 1985. Carbon balance in a salt marsh: Interactions of diffusive export, tidal deposition, and rainfall-caused erosion. Est. Coast. Shelf Sci. 21: 757–771.

    Google Scholar 

  • Childers, D.L. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1988. A flow-through flume technique for quantifying nutrient and materials fluxes in microtidal estuaries. Est. Coast. Shelf Sci. 27: 483–494.

    Google Scholar 

  • Childers, D.L. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1990a. Marsh:water column interactions in two Louisiana estuaries. I. Sediment dynamics. Estuaries 13(4).

  • Childers, D.L. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1990b. Marsh:water column interactions in two Louisiana estuaries. II. Nutrient dynamics. Estuaries 13(4).

  • Childers, D.L., Day, J.W., Jr. and Muller, R.L. 1990. Relating climatological forcing to coastal water levels in Louisiana estuaries and the potential importance of El Niño-Southern oscillation events. Climate Res. 1(1): 31–42.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cleveland, C.J., Neill, C. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1981. The impacts of artificial canals on land loss in the Barataria Basin, LA. pp. 425–433. In: Energy and Ecological Modelling. Edited by W.J. Mitsch, R.W. Bosserman and J.M. Klopatek. Elsevier Scientific Publ. Co., Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

    Google Scholar 

  • Conner, W.H. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1987. The ecology of the Barataria Basin, Louisiana: An estuarine profile. U.S. Fish Wildl. Serv. Biol. Rep. 85(7.13). 165 pp.

  • Craig, N.J., Turner, R.E. and Day, J.W., Jr. 1979. Land loss in coastal Louisiana. Environ. Manage. 3: 133–144.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gagliano, S.M., Meyer-Arendt, K.J. and Wicker, K.M. 1981. Land loss in the Mississippi River deltaic plain. Trans. Gulf Coast. Assoc. Geol. Soc. 31: 295–300.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gardner, L.R. and Kitchens, W. 1978. Sediment and chemical exchanges between saltmarshes and coastal waters. pp. 191–210. In: Transport Processes in Estuarine Environments. Edited by B. Kjerfve. Belle W. Baruch Library of Marine Science, University of South Carolina Press, SC, U.S.A.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gosselink, J.G. and Baumann, R.H. 1980. Wetland inventories: Wetland loss along the United States Coast. Z. Geomorph. N.F. 34: 173–187.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hackney, C.T. and Cleary, W.J. 1987. Saltmarsh loss in southeastern North Carolina lagoons: Importance of sea level rise and inlet dredging. Jour. Coastal Res. 3(1): 93–97.

    Google Scholar 

  • Harris, L. and Gosselink, J.G. 1989. Cumulative impacts of bottomland hardwood conversion on hydrology, water quality, and terrestrial wildlife. pp. 146–171. In: Ecological Processes and Cumulative Impacts: Illustrated by Bottom-land Hardwood Forested Wetlands. Edited by J.G. Gosselink. Lewis Publishers, Chelsea, Michigan, U.S.A.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hoffman, J.S. 1984. Estimates of future sea level rise. pp. 79–103. In: Greenhouse Effect and Sea Level Rise. Edited by M.C. Barth and J.G. Titus. Van Nostrand-Reinhold Co., New York, NY, U.S.A.

    Google Scholar 

  • MacDonald, P.O., Frayer, W.E. and Clauser, J.K. 1979. Documentation, chronology, and future projections of bottom-land hardwood habitat losses in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Plain. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Report, Washington, D. C.

  • Madden, C.J., Day, J.W., Jr. and Randall, J.M. 1988. Freshwater and marine coupling in estuaries of the Mississippi River deltaic plain. Limnol. Oceanogr. 33(4.2): 982–1004.

    Google Scholar 

  • Nixon, S. 1980. Between coastal marshes and coastal waters —A review of twenty years of speculation and research on the role of saltmarshes in estuarine productivity and water chemistry. pp. 437–525. In: Estuarine and Wetland Processes. Edited by P. Hamilton and K. MacDonald. Plenum Press, New York, NY, U.S.A.

    Google Scholar 

  • Odum, W.E. 1984. Dual-gradient concept of detritus transport and processing in estuaries. Bull. Mar. Sci. 35(3): 510–521.

    Google Scholar 

  • Owens, N.J.P., Mantoura, R.F.C., Burkill, P.H., Howland, R.J.M., Pomroy, A.J. and Woodward, E.M.S. 1986. Nutrient cycling studies in Carmarthen Bay: Phytoplankton production, nitrogen assimilation, and regeneration. Mar. Biol. 93: 329–342.

    Google Scholar 

  • Peterson, B.J. and Howarth, R.W. 1987. Sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen isotopes used to trace organic matter flow in the saltmarsh estuaries of Sapelo Island, GA. Limnol. Oceanogr. 32(6): 1195–1213.

    Google Scholar 

  • Phillips, J.D. 1986. Coastal submergence and marsh fringe erosion. Jour. Coastal Res. 2(4): 427–436.

    Google Scholar 

  • Richardson, C., Evans, R. and Carr, D. 1981. Pocosins: An ecosystem in transition. pp. 3–19. In: Pocosin Wetlands. Edited by C.J. Richardson. Hutchinson Ross. Publ. Co., Strousburg, PA, U.S.A.

    Google Scholar 

  • Scaife, W., Turner, R.E. and Costanza, R. 1983. Coastal Louisina: Recent land loss and canal impacts. J. Environ. Manage. 7: 433–442.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stevenson, J.C., Kearney, M.S. and Pendleton, E.C. 1985. Sedimentation and erosion in a Chesapeake Bay brackish marsh system. Mar. Geol. 67: 213–235.

    Google Scholar 

  • Swenson, E.M. and Turner, R.E. 1987. Spoil banks: Effects on a coastal marsh water-level regime. Est. Coast. Shelf Sci. 24: 599–609.

    Google Scholar 

  • Templet, P.H. and Meyer-Arendt, K.J. 1989. Louisiana wetland loss: A regional water management approach to the problem. Env. Mange. 12(2): 181–192.

    Google Scholar 

  • Turner, R.E. 1982. Wetland losses and coastal fisheries: An enigmatic and economically significant dependency. pp. 112–120. In: Proc. Conf. Coastal Erosion and Wetland Modification in Louisiana: Causes, Consequences, and Options. Edited by D.F. Boesch. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv. Biol. Serv. Program FWS/OBS-82/59.

  • Whiting, G.J., McKellar, Jr., Spurrier, J.D. and Wolaver, T.G. 1989. Nitrogen exchange between a portion of vegetated salt marsh and the adjoining creek. Limnol. Oceanogr. 34(2): 463–473.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wolaver, T.G., Wetzel, R.L., Zieman, J.C. and Webb, K.L. 1980. Nutrient interactions between salt marsh, mudflats, and estuarine water. pp. 123–133. In: Estuarine Perspectives. Edited by V.S. Kennedy. Academic Press, London.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wolaver, T.G. and Zieman, J.C. 1983. Tidal exchange of nitrogen and phosphorus between a mesohaline vegetated marsh and the surrounding estuary in the Lower Chesapeake Bay. Est. Coast. Shelf Sci. 16: 321–332.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wolaver, T.G. and Spurrier, J.D. 1988. Carbon transport between a euhaline vegetated marsh in South Carolina and the adjacent tidal creek: Contributions via tidal inundation, runoff, and seepage. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 42: 53–62.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wolaver, T.G., Dame, R.F., Spurrier, J.D. and Miller, A.B. 1988. Sediment exchange between a euhaline salt marsh in South Carolina and the adjacent tidal creek. Jour. Coastal Res. 4(1): 17–26.

    Google Scholar 

  • Zimmerman, R.J. and Minello, T.J. 1984. Densities of Penaeus aztecus, Penaeus setiferus, and other natant macrofauna in a Texas salt marsh. Estuaries 7(4A): 421–433.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and Permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Childers, D.L., Day, J.W. The dilution and loss of wetland function associated with conversion to open water. Wetlands Ecol Manage 1, 163–171 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00177290

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00177290

Keywords

  • areal loss
  • dilution
  • estuary
  • flux
  • functional loss
  • habitat
  • nutrients
  • wetlands