Skip to main content

Mangrove expansion and salt marsh decline at mangrove poleward limits

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

Saintilan, Neil, Wilson, Nicholas C., Rogers, Kerrylee, Rajkaran, Anusha, and Krauss, Ken W., 2013-11-11, Mangrove expansion and salt marsh decline at mangrove poleward limits: Global Change Biology, v. 20, iss. 1.

Summary

Mangroves are species of halophytic intertidal trees and shrubs derived from tropical genera and are likely delimited in latitudinal range by varying sensitivity to cold. There is now sufficient evidence that mangrove species have proliferated at or near their poleward limits on at least five continents over the past half century, at the expense of salt marsh. Avicennia is the most cold-tolerant genus worldwide, and is the subject of most of the observed changes. Avicennia germinans has extended in range along the USA Atlantic coast and expanded into salt marsh as a consequence of lower frost frequency and intensity in the southern USA. The genus has also expanded into salt marsh at its southern limit in Peru, and on the Pacific [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southeast CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Citation Extension

journalGlobal Change Biology
parts
typedoi
value10.1111/gcb.12341
typestartPage
value147
typeissn
value1365-2486
typeissue
value1
typeendPage
value157
typevolume
value20

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...