Projected changes in mangrove distribution and vegetation structure under climate change in the southeastern United States

Author:

Bardou Rémi1ORCID,Osland Michael J.2ORCID,Alemu Jahson B.13ORCID,Feher Laura C.2ORCID,Harlan David P.4,Scyphers Steven B.56ORCID,Shepard Christine C.7ORCID,Swinea Savannah H.56ORCID,Thorne Kalaina1,Andrew Jill E.8ORCID,Hughes A. Randall1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northeastern University Marine Science Center Nahant Massachusetts USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey Lafayette Louisiana USA

3. The Nature Conservancy, Massachusetts Chapter Boston Massachusetts USA

4. The Nature Conservancy, Louisiana Chapter Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

5. Stokes School of Marine and Environmental Sciences and Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work University of South Alabama Mobile Alabama USA

6. Dauphin Island Sea Lab Dauphin Island Alabama USA

7. The Nature Conservancy, Gulf of Mexico Program Key West Florida USA

8. The Nature Conservancy, Louisiana Chapter St. Martinville Louisiana USA

Abstract

AbstractAimThe climate change‐induced transition from grass‐dominated marshes to woody‐plant‐dominated mangrove forests has the potential to impact the ecosystem goods and services provided by coastal wetlands. To better anticipate and prepare for these impacts, there is a need to advance understanding of future changes in mangrove distribution and coastal wetland vegetation structural properties due to warming winters.LocationSoutheastern United States.Time PeriodRecent (1981–2010) and future (2071–2100).Major Taxa StudiedCoastal wetland vegetation.MethodsWe estimated changes in mangrove distribution and coastal wetland vegetation structure using known climate‐ecological relationships, recent climate data for the period 1981–2010, and future projected climate data for the period 2071–2100. We quantified potential changes in mangrove presence, mangrove relative abundance, coastal wetland vegetation height, and coastal wetland vegetation aboveground biomass under two Shared Socio‐Economic Pathway scenarios (SSPs; SSP2‐4.5 and SSP5‐8.5), which correspond to intermediate and high greenhouse gas emissions scenarios, respectively.ResultsOur analyses indicate that mangrove presence and relative abundance will dramatically increase in the northern Gulf of Mexico and the southeast Atlantic coast of the United States, particularly under the high emissions scenario. Because of the higher stature of mangroves relative to salt marsh vegetation, this expansion will cause a transformative change in coastal wetland vegetation height and aboveground biomass in many areas. However, along the arid southern Texas coast, low precipitation and high salinities are expected to constrain mangrove expansion and growth.Main ConclusionsOur results show where and to what extent climate change, in the form of winter temperature warming, is projected to enable the transition from shorter, grass‐dominated salt marshes to taller, woody plant‐dominated mangrove forests in the southeastern United States, with consequent impacts on ecosystem goods and services.

Funder

National Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Reference67 articles.

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