Twenty-three estimates of soil subsidence rates arising under the influence of local hydrologic changes from flap-gates, weirs, dikes, and culverts in tidal wetlands were compared to 75 examples of subsidence in drained agricultural wetlands. The induced subsidence rates from these hydrologic modifications in tidal wetlands can continue for more than 100 years, and range between 1.67 to 0.10 cm yr−1 within 1 to 155 years after the hydrologic modifications commence. These subsidence rates are lower than in freshwater wetlands drained for agricultural purposes, decline with age, and are significant in comparison to the rates of global sea level rise or the average soil accretion rates. The elevation change resulting from local hydrologic mani...
Accelerated sea-level rise (SLR) poses the threat of salt marsh submergence, especially in marshes t...
Coastal wetlands provide an abundance of ecosystem services that benefit society, such as essential ...
Fluctuations in sea-level rise rates are thought to dominate the formation and evolution of coastal ...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Along coasts and estuaries, formerly embanked land is increasingly restored into tidal marshes in or...
The stability of levees in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is threatened by continued subsidence of...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
As sea levels rise, a “resilient” coastal wetland can respond in two ways; it can migrate upslope to...
Hydrology is the primary forcing function in wetlands. Therefore, alterations to hydrology, which ca...
Coastal wetlands provide valuable services such as flood protection and fisheries production to a gl...
Sediment accretion and elevation change in tidal forests, and the corresponding ability of these wet...
<div><p>Sea-level rise is a major factor in wetland loss worldwide, and in much of Chesapeake Bay (U...
Accelerating sea-level rise and human impacts to the coast (e.g., altered sediment supply and hydrol...
The objectives of this study were to identify processes that contribute to resilience of coastal wet...
Accelerated sea-level rise (SLR) poses the threat of salt marsh submergence, especially in marshes t...
Coastal wetlands provide an abundance of ecosystem services that benefit society, such as essential ...
Fluctuations in sea-level rise rates are thought to dominate the formation and evolution of coastal ...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Along coasts and estuaries, formerly embanked land is increasingly restored into tidal marshes in or...
The stability of levees in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is threatened by continued subsidence of...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
As sea levels rise, a “resilient” coastal wetland can respond in two ways; it can migrate upslope to...
Hydrology is the primary forcing function in wetlands. Therefore, alterations to hydrology, which ca...
Coastal wetlands provide valuable services such as flood protection and fisheries production to a gl...
Sediment accretion and elevation change in tidal forests, and the corresponding ability of these wet...
<div><p>Sea-level rise is a major factor in wetland loss worldwide, and in much of Chesapeake Bay (U...
Accelerating sea-level rise and human impacts to the coast (e.g., altered sediment supply and hydrol...
The objectives of this study were to identify processes that contribute to resilience of coastal wet...
Accelerated sea-level rise (SLR) poses the threat of salt marsh submergence, especially in marshes t...
Coastal wetlands provide an abundance of ecosystem services that benefit society, such as essential ...
Fluctuations in sea-level rise rates are thought to dominate the formation and evolution of coastal ...