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Modeling soil porewater salinity in mangrove forests (Everglades, Florida, USA) impacted by hydrological restoration and a warming climate

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Xiaochen Zhao, Victor Rivera-Monroy, Hongqing Wang, Z George Xue, Cheng-Feng Tsai, Clinton S. Willson, Edward Castañeda-Moya, and Robert R.Twilley, 2020-09-26, Modeling soil porewater salinity in mangrove forests (Everglades, Florida, USA) impacted by hydrological restoration and a warming climate: Ecological Modelling, v. 436.

Summary

Hydrology is a critical driver controlling mangrove wetlands structural and functional attributes at different spatial and temporal scales. Yet, human activities have negatively affected hydrology, causing mangrove diebacks and coverage loss worldwide. In fact, the assessment of mangrove water budgets, impacted by natural and human disturbances, is limited due to a lack of long-term data and information that hinders our understanding of how changes in hydroperiod and salinity control mangrove productivity and spatial distribution. In this study, we implemented a mass balance-based hydrological model (RHYMAN) that explicitly considers groundwater discharge in the Shark River estuary (SRE, southwestern Everglades) located in a karstic [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • South Central CASC

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citationTypeJournal
journalEcological Modelling
parts
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2020.109292
typeVolume
value436

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