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Document Details
Title |
Long-term data reveal that grazer density mediates climatic stress in salt marshes |
Archive |
All Files / Documents / Publications / Journal Articles |
Abstract |
Understanding how climate and local stressors interact is paramount for predicting future ecosystem structure. The effects of multiple stressors are often examined in small-scale and short-term field experiments, limiting understanding of the spatial and temporal generality of the findings. Using a 22-year observational dataset of plant and grazer abundance in a southeastern US salt marsh, we analyzed how changes in drought and grazer density combined to affect plant biomass. We found: (1) increased drought severity and higher snail density both correlated with lower plant biomass; (2) drought and snail effects interacted additively; and, (3) snail effects had a threshold, with additive top-down effects only occurring when snails were present at high densities. These results suggest that the emergence of multiple stressor effects can be density dependent, and they validate short-term experimental evidence that consumers can augment environmental stress. These findings have important implications for predicting future ecosystem structure and managing natural ecosystems. |
Contributors |
Carter S. Smith, Stacy Zhang, Marc Simon Hensel, Steven C. Pennings and Brian R. Silliman |
Citation |
Smith, C.S., Zhang, S., Hensel, M.S., Pennings, S.C. and Silliman, B.R. 2024. Long-term data reveal that grazer density mediates climatic stress in salt marshes. Ecology. (DOI: 10.1002/ecy.4323) |
Key Words |
drought, herbivory, Littoraria, SINERR Publication, snails, Spartina, UGAMI Publication |
File Date |
2024 |
Web Link |
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