Summary
Black mangroves are expanding into Texas coastal wetlands and displacing marsh plants. The effects on coastal biodiversity and wetland biogeochemistry are largely unknown. Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (TAMU-CC) will conduct a study within the Mission-Aransas National Estuarine Research Reserve, an area that experienced one of the largest increases in black mangroves, to assess impact. To better understand this important, expanding ecosystem, TAMU-CC will carry out innovative research to determine methane, sulfide, and ammonium fluxes from mangrove sediment, how the fluxes affect associated wetland fauna and if there is a statistical link between sediment metabolic profile and benthic organismal biodiversity. Project findings will be integrated into education and outreach modules.
Basics
Classification
- CMP 306
Timeline
Funding Sources
Source 1
Source 2
-
Document18-088-000-A598-final-rpt.pdf (29.85 MB)