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Competing effects of vegetation density on sedimentation in deltaic marshes

Yuan Xu, C. R. Esposito, Maricel Beltrán-Burgos, Heidi Nepf

2022Nature Communications69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Marsh vegetation, a definitive component of delta ecosystems, has a strong effect on sediment retention and land-building, controlling both how much sediment can be delivered to and how much is retained by the marsh. An understanding of how vegetation influences these processes would improve the restoration and management of marshes. We use a random displacement model to simulate sediment transport, deposition, and resuspension within a marsh. As vegetation density increases, velocity declines, which reduces sediment supply to the marsh, but also reduces resuspension, which enhances sediment retention within the marsh. The competing trends of supply and retention produce a nonlinear relationship between sedimentation and vegetation density, such that an intermediate density yields the maximum sedimentation. Two patterns of sedimentation spatial distribution emerge in the simulation, and the exponential distribution only occurs when resuspension is absent. With resuspension, sediment is delivered farther into the marsh and in a uniform distribution. The model was validated with field observations of sedimentation response to seasonal variation in vegetation density observed in a marsh within the Mississippi River Delta.

Topics & Concepts

MarshSedimentationSedimentVegetation (pathology)Environmental scienceHydrology (agriculture)Salt marshGeologyEcologySoil scienceWetlandGeomorphologyOceanographyBiologyPathologyGeotechnical engineeringMedicineCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsGeological formations and processesCoastal and Marine Dynamics
Competing effects of vegetation density on sedimentation in deltaic marshes | Litcius