Despite the well-recognized importance of plant traits for biogeomorphic development of landscapes, our understanding remains limited of how species-specific plant traits respond to and serve as drivers for the sedimentary dynamics within a biogeomorphic landscape. By manipulating a series of laboratory experiments, using mesocosms and a flume, we examined how species-specific differences in expansion strategy, i.e., clonal step-length of laterally expanding tillers, both respond to sediment type and drive cliff formation and persistence. We compared three marsh species, with contrasting clonal expansion traits, that are dominant in many estuaries worldwide: Spartina anglica, Scirpus maritimus, and Phragmites australis. Our results revealed...
Feedbacks between geomorphology and plants are increasingly recognized as key drivers shaping a vari...
Microgeographic genetic divergence can create fine-scale trait variation. When such divergence occur...
The salt marsh grass Spartina anglica is an important habitat-modifying ecosystem engineering agent ...
Despite the well-recognized importance of plant traits for biogeomorphic development of landscapes, ...
The importance of ecosystem engineering and biogeomorphic processes in shaping many aquatic and semi...
We explored to what extent morphological variation and habitat modification are correlated for an au...
There is a growing recognition of the important role of scale-dependent feedback for biogeomorpholog...
There is a growing recognition of the important role of scale-dependent feedback for biogeomorpholog...
In biogeomorphic landscapes, plant traits can steer landscape development through plant‐mediated fee...
Many vegetated coastal ecosystems are formed through ecosystem engineering by clonal vegetation. Rec...
The ecological responses of plant populations along a successional gradient have been intensively ex...
In biogeomorphic landscapes, plant traits can steer landscape development through plant-mediated fee...
Feedbacks between geomorphology and plants are increasingly recognized as key drivers shaping a vari...
Microgeographic genetic divergence can create fine-scale trait variation. When such divergence occur...
The salt marsh grass Spartina anglica is an important habitat-modifying ecosystem engineering agent ...
Despite the well-recognized importance of plant traits for biogeomorphic development of landscapes, ...
The importance of ecosystem engineering and biogeomorphic processes in shaping many aquatic and semi...
We explored to what extent morphological variation and habitat modification are correlated for an au...
There is a growing recognition of the important role of scale-dependent feedback for biogeomorpholog...
There is a growing recognition of the important role of scale-dependent feedback for biogeomorpholog...
In biogeomorphic landscapes, plant traits can steer landscape development through plant‐mediated fee...
Many vegetated coastal ecosystems are formed through ecosystem engineering by clonal vegetation. Rec...
The ecological responses of plant populations along a successional gradient have been intensively ex...
In biogeomorphic landscapes, plant traits can steer landscape development through plant-mediated fee...
Feedbacks between geomorphology and plants are increasingly recognized as key drivers shaping a vari...
Microgeographic genetic divergence can create fine-scale trait variation. When such divergence occur...
The salt marsh grass Spartina anglica is an important habitat-modifying ecosystem engineering agent ...