A walkway for people over a salt marsh.
A salt marsh in the Marine Park Nature Center in Brooklyn, New York, after a snow melt. A salt marsh is a type of marsh that is a transitional zone between land and salty or brackish water (e.g., sloughs, bays, estuaries). It is dominated by halophytic (salt tolerant) herbaceous plants. Historically, salt marshes have sometimes been treated as "wastelands", along with other wetlands. We now know that salt marshes are one of the most biologically productive habitats on the planet, rivaling tropical rainforests. This is partly due to the daily tidal surges that bring in nutrients, the natural chemical activity of salty (or brackish) water, the tendency of nutrients to settle in roots of the plants there, and the tendency of algae to bloom in the shallow unshaded water. Salt marshes also provide a benefit by protecting against severe weather, such as in the North American Gulf Coast. In the past, substantial areas of saltmarsh have been reclaimed as agricultural land and for urban development, but in the US and Europe they are now accorded a high level of protection by the Clean Water Act and the Habitats Directive respectively. There is growing interest in restoring salt marshes, through a process of managed retreat. Download high resolution version (1204x521, 102 KB)Bride Brook and Coastal Salt Marsh, East Lyne Conn. ...
Download high resolution version (1204x521, 102 KB)Bride Brook and Coastal Salt Marsh, East Lyne Conn. ...
âAtlanticâ redirects here. ...
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Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 293 KB)Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) Salt Marsh Nature Center, located in Marine Park neighborhood of Southern Brooklyn, NY. Typical landscapes: weed, grass, water, walkways. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 293 KB)Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) Salt Marsh Nature Center, located in Marine Park neighborhood of Southern Brooklyn, NY. Typical landscapes: weed, grass, water, walkways. ...
Brooklyn (named after the Dutch city Breukelen) is one of the five boroughs of New York City. ...
NY redirects here. ...
ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (1024x768, 713 KB) Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (1024x768, 713 KB) Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Brooklyn (named after the Dutch city Breukelen) is one of the five boroughs of New York City. ...
NY redirects here. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 201 KB)Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) Walkway for people. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 201 KB)Photo by Greogry Kats (myself) Walkway for people. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 352 KB)Photo by Gregory Kats(myself) The same saltmarsh - look absolutely different and picturesque in Winter, just after some snow melted. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1024x768, 352 KB)Photo by Gregory Kats(myself) The same saltmarsh - look absolutely different and picturesque in Winter, just after some snow melted. ...
Brooklyn (named after the Dutch city Breukelen) is one of the five boroughs of New York City. ...
NY redirects here. ...
Freshwater marsh in Florida In geography, a marsh is a type of wetland, featuring grasses, rushes, reeds, typhas, sedges, cat tails, and other herbaceous plants (possibly with low-growing woody plants) in a context of shallow water. ...
A halophyte is a plant that naturally grows where it is affected by salinity in the root area or by salt spray, such as in saline semi-deserts, mangrove swamps, marshes and sloughs, and seashores. ...
Herbs: basil Herbs (IPA: hÉ()b, or Éb; see pronunciation differences) are plants grown for any purpose other than food, wood or beauty. ...
The Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251, et seq. ...
The Habitats Directive (more formally known as Council Directive 92/43/EEC on the Conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora) is a European Union directive adopted in 1992as an EU response to the Berne Convention. ...
In the context of coastal erosion, managed retreat allows an area that was not previously exposed to flooding by the sea to become flooded. ...
Conditions required Salt marshes develop on depositional coasts, bays, and estuaries where tidal action is relatively gentle and erosion no more than intermittent and light enough to allow vegetation to take hold. They are common on low-energy coasts such as estuaries, enclosed bays, and the land sides of barrier islands and strips. Estuaries and coastal waters are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, providing ecological, economic, cultural, and aesthetic benefits. ...
Sand bars in the Mississippi River at Arkansas and Mississippi A bar is a linear shoaling landform feature within a body of water. ...
Vegetation Plant species diversity is relatively low, since the flora must be tolerant of salt, complete or partial submersion, and anoxic mud substrate. The most common salt marsh plants are glassworts (Salicornia spp.) and the cord grasses (Spartina spp.), which have worldwide distribution. They are often the first plants to take hold in a mudflat and begin its ecological succession into a salt marsh. Their shoots lift the main flow of the tide above the mud surface while their roots spread into the substrate and stabilize the sticky mud and carry oxygen into it so that other plants can establish themselves as well. Plants such as sea lavenders (Limonium spp.), plantains (Plantago spp.), and varied sedges and rushes grow once the mud has been vegetated by the pioneer species. In mathematics, a differentiable map f : M â N from an m-manifold M to an n-manifold N is called a submersion if its differential df is a surjective map at every point p of M, or equivalently if rank df(p) = dim N. Examples include the projections in smooth...
Species See text. ...
Species See text. ...
Mudflats in Brewster, Massachusetts extending hundreds of yards offshore at the low tide. ...
Secondary succession: trees are colonizing uncultivated fields and meadows. ...
Species About 120-150 species; see text Sea-lavender (also Sea Lavender, Sealavender) or Statice is a genus Limonium of flowering plants with about 120 species. ...
Subgenus There are 5 subgenera in Plantago. ...
Genera See text The Family Cyperaceae, or the Sedge family, is a taxon of monocot flowering plants that superficially resemble grasses or rushes. ...
Genera Andesia Distichia Juncus - Rush Luzula - Woodrush Marsippospermum Oxychloë Prionium Rostkovia The Juncaceae, or the Rush Family, is a rather small monocot flowering plant family. ...
Media:Example. ...
The flora of a salt marsh is differentiated into levels according to the plants' individual tolerance of salinity and water table levels. Vegetation found at the water must be able to survive high salt concentrations, periodical submersion, and a certain amount of water movement, while plants further inland in the marsh can sometimes experience dry, low-nutrient conditions. Salt marshes are quite photosynthetically active and are extremely productive habitats. They serve as depositories for a large amount of organic matter, and are full of decomposition, which feeds a broad food chain of organisms from bacteria to mammals. Interestingly (in such a biologically productive biome), many of the halophytic plants such as cordgrass are not grazed at all by higher animals, but die off and decompose, to become food for micro-organisms, which in turn become food for fish and in turn birds. A biome is a major class of ecologically similar communities of plants, animals, and soil organisms. ...
In wintertime the saltmarsh looks more open than in summer. More space is seen between reeds as snow falls between them. The water partly freezes, which makes it look rather spectacular.
Marais salants In warmer climates, salt can be produced by solar energy so that the French equivalent of the salt marsh, the marais salant has come to be envisaged primarily as an industrial plant, though classified as a form of agriculture, known in French as saliculture. For this aspect of the salt marsh, see Salt evaporation pond. San Francisco Bay salt ponds Salt evaporation pond in Ile de Ré, France. ...
Wetland dieback In the summer and fall of 2002, Dr. Scott Warren at Connecticut College and Ron Rozsa of the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection, noticed the sudden (within one year) disappearance of emergent vegetation at several south shore Cape Cod wetlands connected to Nantucket Sound. The vegetation loss could not be explained by any typical New England causes of vegetation loss such as ice, wrack or herbivory (e.g., geese or muskrat).[1] Connecticut College is a coeducational, highly selective private liberal arts college located in New London, Connecticut. ...
Four years later, the cause is still unknown, but there are 17 suspected dieback marshes on Cape Cod, and a few other possible sites are on the North and South Shore, according to the Wetland Restoration Program of the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management. Cape Cod (or simply the Cape) is an arm-shaped peninsula coextensive with Barnstable County, Massachusetts and forming the easternmost portion of the Massachusetts, in the Northeastern United States. ...
In Louisiana, 300,000 acres (1200 km²) turned brown around the year 2000. In 2002, researchers noticed that about 2,000 acres (8 km²) of salt marsh in Georgia turned to mud, similar to what is happening in New England. But as of mid-2006, the Louisiana and Georgia marshes are growing back -- or at least not getting worse -- while marshes on the Cape do not seem to be recovering naturally. [2]
External links - Geography resource for schools
- Salt Marsh Nature Center located in the Marine Park section of Brooklyn, New York, USA
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