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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Kerrylee Rogers Clear advanced filters
  • Humans and mangroves adapt to conditions arising from subsidence and relative sea-level rise. Quantifying adaptation responses provides an innovative and cost-effective means of characterizing spatial variation in subsidence and relative sea-level rise and delivers critical information for coastal planning.

    • Kerrylee Rogers
    News & Views
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 6, P: 1510-1511
  • A new study shows the total global SOC stock of 1 m in the world’s tidal marshes to be 1.44 Pg C. On average, SOC in tidal marshes’ 0–30 cm and 30–100 cm soil layers are estimated at 83.1 Mg C ha−1 and 185.3 Mg C ha−1, respectively.

    • Tania L. Maxwell
    • Mark D. Spalding
    • Thomas A. Worthington
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-16
  • Without mitigation, relative sea-level rises under current climate change projections will exceed the capacity of coastal habitats such as mangroves and tidal marshes to adjust, leading to instability and profound changes to coastal ecosystems.

    • Neil Saintilan
    • Benjamin Horton
    • Glenn Guntenspergen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 621, P: 112-119
  • We identified the function of mangrove ecosystems that underpin ecosystem services, their responses to extreme weather and climatic events, and their role as crucial social-ecological systems as important paradigms shaping mangrove research now and in times to come. Since themes around functions and connectivity, ecological resilience to extreme events, and human–environment interactions are likely to be important underpinnings for other coastal and terrestrial ecosystems too, this paper aims to promote discussion within and beyond the mangrove research community and to help the broader plant science field in viewing and understanding the issue of safeguarding mangrove forests for the future.

    • Farid Dahdouh-Guebas
    • Daniel A. Friess
    • Stefano Cannicci
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Plants
    Volume: 8, P: 1131-1135
  • Assessment of mangrove forest surface elevation changes across the Indo-Pacific coastal region finds that almost 70 per cent of the sites studied do not have enough sediment availability to offset predicted sea-level rise; modelling indicates that such sites could be submerged as early as 2070.

    • Catherine E. Lovelock
    • Donald R. Cahoon
    • Tran Triet
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 526, P: 559-563