Individual-based modeling of flooding and salinity effects on a coastal swamp forest
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, Susanne S Hoeppner
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2011.07.017
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Coastal swamps are among the rapidly vanishing wetland habitats in
Louisiana. Increased flooding, nutrient and sediment deprivation, and
salt-water intrusion have been implicated as probable causes of the
decline of coastal swamps. We developed a two-species individual-based
forest succession model to compare the growth and composition of a
cypress-tupelo swamp under various combinations of flooding intensity
and salinity levels, using historical time-series of stage and salinity
data as inputs. Our model simulates forest succession over 500 years by
representing the growth, mortality, and reproduction of individual
Taxodium distichum (baldcypress) and Nyssa aquatica (water tupelo) trees
in a 1-km(2) spatial grid of 1 m x 10 m cells that vary in water levels
and salinity through differences in elevation. We independently adjusted
the elevations of each cell to obtain different grid-wide mean
elevations and standard deviations of elevation; this affected the
temporal and spatial pattern of flooding. We calibrated the model by
adjusting selected parameters until averaged basal area, stem density
and wood production rates under two different mean elevations (partially
versus highly flooded) were qualitatively similar to comparable values
reported for swamps in the literature. Corroboration involved comparing
model predictions to four well-monitored contrasting habitat sites
within the Maurepas Basin, Louisiana, USA. Model predictions of both
species combined showed the same patterns among sites as the data, but
the model overestimated wood production and the dominance of T.
distichum. Exploratory simulations predicted that increased flooding
leads to swamps with reduced basal areas and stem densities, while
increased salinity resulted in lower basal areas at low salinity
concentration (similar to 1-3 psu) and complete tree mortality at higher
salinity concentrations (similar to 2-6 psu). Our model can provide
insight into the succession dynamics of coastal swamps and information
for the effective design of restoration actions. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V.
All rights reserved.
Tags
Sea-level rise
South-carolina
Tree growth
Primary productivity
Mississippi delta
Taxodium-distichum l
Rising water levels
Louisiana
swamp
Nyssa-aquatica
Bottomland forest