Environmental drivers in mangrove establishment and early development: A review

Mangroves have a global distribution within coastal tropical and subtropical climates, and have even expanded to some temperate locales. Where they do occur, mangroves provide a plethora of goods and services, ranging from coastal protection from storms and erosion to direct income for human societi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquatic botany 2008-08, Vol.89 (2), p.105-127
Hauptverfasser: Krauss, Ken W., Lovelock, Catherine E., McKee, Karen L., López-Hoffman, Laura, Ewe, Sharon M.L., Sousa, Wayne P.
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container_end_page 127
container_issue 2
container_start_page 105
container_title Aquatic botany
container_volume 89
creator Krauss, Ken W.
Lovelock, Catherine E.
McKee, Karen L.
López-Hoffman, Laura
Ewe, Sharon M.L.
Sousa, Wayne P.
description Mangroves have a global distribution within coastal tropical and subtropical climates, and have even expanded to some temperate locales. Where they do occur, mangroves provide a plethora of goods and services, ranging from coastal protection from storms and erosion to direct income for human societies. The mangrove literature has become rather voluminous, prompting many subdisciplines within a field that earlier in the 20th century received little focus. Much of this research has become diffuse by sheer numbers, requiring detailed syntheses to make research results widely available to resource managers. In this review, we take an inclusive approach in focusing on eco-physiological and growth constraints to the establishment and early development of mangrove seedlings in the intertidal zone. This is a critical life stage for mangroves, i.e., the period between dispersal and recruitment to the sapling stage. We begin with some of the research that has set the precedent for seedling-level eco-physiological research in mangroves, and then we focus on recent advances (circa. 1995 to present) in our understanding of temperature, carbon dioxide, salinity, light, nutrient, flooding, and specific biotic influences on seedling survival and growth. As such, we take a new approach in describing seedling response to global factors (e.g., temperature) along with site-specific factors (e.g., salinity). All variables will strongly influence the future of seedling dynamics in ways perhaps not yet documented in mature forests. Furthermore, understanding how different mangrove species can respond to global factors and regional influences is useful for diagnosing observed mortality within mangrove wetlands, managed or natural. This review provides an updated eco-physiological knowledge base for future research and reforestation activity, and for understanding important links among climate change, local physico-chemical condition, and establishment and early growth of mangrove seedlings.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.aquabot.2007.12.014
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Biotic effect
Brackish
CO 2
Ecophysiology
Flooding
Global climate change
Growth
Light
Nutrient
Salinity
Sea-level rise
Temperature
title Environmental drivers in mangrove establishment and early development: A review
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