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The Ecology and Management of Wetlands: Volume 1: Ecology of Wetlands PDF

603 Pages·1987·9.455 MB·English
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THE ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT OF WETLANDS Volume 1: ECOLOGY OF WETLANDS This two-volume work presents selected papers from a symposium on wetlands organised by the International Society of Anaerobiosis, held in June 1986 in Charleston, South Carolina. Contributors are international authorities from all over the world, but principally the USA and Europe. Volume one covers the general ecology ofwetlands. Principal subject areas addressed include how plants are adapted to waterlogged soils, plant-animal interactions, soils and geology of wetlands, hydrology and estuarine ecosystems. Volume two covers more applied topics such as agricultural use, restoration and regulation, use for forestry, fisheries and wildlife, the development of wetlands for agriculture and evaluation methods. The volumes represent a definitive statement of the current subject and almost everyone that works with wetlands will find topics of interest in each volume. More specifically, ecologists, botanists and soil scientists as weil as workers in forestry, fisheries and wildlife management will find much of value in these volumes. Edited by Donal D. Hook, Clemson University, South Carolina, and others THE ECOLOGYAND MANAGEMENT OFWETLANDS • Volum.e 1: Ecology of Wetlands D.D. HOOK, W.H. McKEE, Jr, H.K. SMITH, J. GREGORY, V.G. BURRELL, Jr, M.R. DeVOE, R.E. SOJKA, s. GILBERT, R. BANKS, L.H. STOLZY, c. BROOKS, T.D. MATTHEWS and T.H. SHEAR CROOM HELM London & Sydney TIMBER PRESS Portland, Oregon © 1988 Donal D. Hook Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1s t edition 1988 Croom Helm Ltd, Provident House, Burrell Row, Beckenham, Kent, BR3 lAT Croom Helm Australia, 44-50 Waterloo Road, North Ryde, 2113, New South Wales British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data The ecology and management of wetlands. 1. Wetland conservation 2. Wetland ecology I. Hook D.D. 333.91'815 QH75 ISBN 978-1-4684-8380-2 ISBN 978-1-4684-8378-9 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-4684-8378-9 First published in the USA 1988 by Timber Press, 9999 S.W. Wilshire, Portland, OR 97225, USA CONTENTS Preface Acknowledgements List of Contributors PART I. THE RESOURCE 1. Global Wetlands - History • Current Status and Future Edward Maltby 3 2. The Functions of a Pristine Estuarine Ecosystem F. John Vernberg 15 3. Aquatic Animal Production and Wetland Relationships: Insights Gleaned Following Wetland Loss or Gain R. Eugene Turner and Donald F. Boesch 25 - 4. River Regulation Effects on Floodplain Hydrology and Ecology Charles V. Klimas 40 5. Expertise in Wetlands Research and Management: The Need and Some Priorities for North-South Transfer Patrick J. Dugan 50 PART 11. HYDROLOGIC AND WATER QUALITY VALUES OF WETLANDS 6. A Review of the Recharge-Discharge Function of Wetlands D.I. Siegel 59 7. Some Comments on the Relation Between Ground Water and Wetlands Virginia Carter and Richard P. Novitzki 68 CONTENTS 8. Water Quality Functions of Wetlands: Natural and Managed Systems Robert K. Bastian and Jay Benforado 87 9. Analysis of Flood Peak Moderation by Depressional Wetland Sites John M. Kittelson 98 10. Physical and Biological Control of Mangrove Pore Water Chemistry Paul R. Carlson, Jr and Laura A. Yarbro 112 ,11. The Value of Wetlands in Low Relief Landscapes M.T. Brown and M.F. Sullivan 133 12. Wetland Evapotranspiration in Temperate and Arid Climates R. H. Kadlec, R. B. Williams and R. D. Scheffe 146 13. Role of Coastal Marshes in Energy Dissipation and Shore Protection Paul L. Knutson 161 14. Ground-water and Surface-water Interactions in Minnesota and Wisconsin Wetlands R.G. Brown, J.R. Stark and G.L. Patterson 175 PART III. BIOLOGICAL VALUES OF WETLANDS 15. Wetlands and Their Relationship to Migrating and Winter Populations of Waterfowl Frank C. Bellrose and Nannette M. Trudeau 183 16. Aquatic Habitats of Breeding Waterfowl George A. Swanson 195 17. Coastal Wetlands - Major Ecological Entities for Wading and Shore Birds S.A. Hussain 203 18. Mammals and Wetlands Erik K. Fritzell 213 19. Endangered, Threatened and Rare Wetland Plants and AnimaIs of the Continental United States William A. Niering 227 20. Aquatic Invertebrates of Freshwater Wetlands: Function and Ecology Henry R. Murkin and Dale A. Wrubleski 239 CONTENTS PART IV. FORMATION. CHEMISTRY AND BIOLOGY OF WETLAND SOlLS 21. Soil Formation Under Hydromorphic Conditions S.W. Buol and R.A. Rebertus 253 22. Characterization and Origin of Delmarva Bay Basin Fill M.H. Stoltz and M.C. Rabenhorst 263 23. Gas Exchange and Atmospheric Properties of Flooded Soils W. Stepniewski and J. Glinski 269 24. Chemistry of Metals and Trace Elements in a Submerged Soll J.T. Gilmour and P.M. Gale 279 25. Phosphorus Transformations in Flooded Soils L.R. Hossner and W.H. Baker 293 26. Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics in Wetland Soils K.R. Reddy and D.A. Graetz 307 27. The Influence of Redox Potential on the Environmental Chemistry of Contaminants in Soils and Sediments Robert P. Gambrell and William H. Patrick. Jr 319 28. Wetland Soils with High Sulfide Contents Leendert J. Pons 334 29. SoH Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Organie Carbon in Transplanted Estuarine Marshes C.B. Craft. S.W. Broome and E.D. Seneca 351 PART V. THE TOLERANCE OF PLANT SPECIES TO WETLAND SITES 30. Biochemical Adaptations to Anoxia in Barnyard Grass Theodore C. Fox, Robert A. Kennedy and Ali A. Alani 359 31. Involvement of the Hormones Ethylene and Abscisic Acid in Some Adaptive Responses of Plants to Submergence. Soil Waterlogging and Oxygen Shortage Michael B. Jackson 373 32. Nutrient Uptake and Acclimation to Soil Waterlogging and Oxygen Shortage in Non-wetland Plants M.C. Drew 383 CONTENTS 33. Cytoplasmic Acidosis and Flooding Tolerance in Crop Plants Justin K.M. Roberts 392 34. The Relationship of Soil Parameters and Root Metabolism to Primary Production in Periodically Inundated Soils Irving A. Mendelssohn and David M. Burdick 398 35. Mineral Nutrition of Oxygen-stressed Crops and its Relationship to some Physiological Responses R.E. Sojka and L.H. Stolzy 429 36. Responses of Woody Seedlings to Elevated Flood Water Temperatures Kenneth W. McLeod, Lisa A. Donovan and Nancy J. Stumpff 441 37. Ultrastructure Studies as a Means of Evaluating Plant Tolerance to Flooding B • B. Vartapetian 452 38. Use of Oxygen Microelectrodes to Measure Aeration in the Roots of Intact Tree Seedlings Donal D. Hook and Martha R. McKevlin 467 39. Flood Tolerance Indices for Palustrine Forest Speeies Russell F. Theriot 477 40. Interspecifie Genetie Variation of Loblolly Pine Tolerance to Soi! Waterlogging Theodore H. Shear and Donal D. Hook 489 PART VI. ESTUARINE WETLANDS AND INTERACTIONS AMONG THEIR COMPONENTS 41. Pathways and Controls of the Carbon Cyele in Salt Marshes James T. Morris 497 42. Irregularly Flooded Salt Marshes of the Gulf and Atlantie Coasts of the United States Judy P. Stout 511 43. A Comparison of Vaseular Plant Communities in Tidal Freshwater and Saltwater Marshes William E. Odum and John K. Hoover 526 44. Herbivore Population Dynamies in Intertidal Marshlands: The Role of Host Plant Nutrition Robert F. Denno 535 CONTENTS 45. The Utllization of Seagrass Meadows by Fishery Organisms W.J. Kenworthy, G.W. Thayer and M.S. Fonseca 548 46. A Comparison of Fish and Invertebrate Community Composition in Tidal Freshwater and Oligohaline Marsh Systems William E. Odum, Lawrence P. Rozas and Carole C. McIvor 561 47. Pattern and Process in Arid-region Salt Marshes - Southern California Christopher P. Onuf and Joy B. Zedler 570 Index 582 PREFACE This book contains the proceedings of a symposium held at the College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, USA, 16-20 June 1986. The seed for this symposium arose from a group of physiologists , soU scientists and biochemists that met in Leningrad, USSR in July 1975 at the 12th Botanical Conference in a Session organized by Professor B.B. Vartepetian. This group and others later conspired to contribute to a book entitled Plant Life in Anaerobic Environments (eds. D. D. Hook and R. M. M. Crawford, Ann Arbor Science, 1978). Several contributors to the book suggested in 1983 that a broad-scoped symposium on wetlands would be useful (a) in facilitating communication among the diverse research groups involved in wetlands research (b) in bringing researchers and managers together and (c) in presenting a com prehensive and balanced coverage on the status of ecology ami management of wetlands from a global perspective. With this encouragement, the senior editor organized a Plan ning Committee that encompassed expertise from many disciplines of wetland scientists and managers. This Committee, with input from their colleagues around the world, organized a symposium that addressed almost every aspect of wetland ecology and management. The proceedings have been slightly reorganized into a two volume book that focuses on: (1) the resource and the basic biology and ecology of wetland plants, animals • soils. hydrology and their values and interactions • (Volume I) and (2) the practi cality of applying such information to protect and manage the finite wetland resources (Volume 11). Within each volume the subject matter has been organized into subject area sections to aid the user to find quickly topics that are relevant to their area of interest.

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