17 research outputs found

    Repetitive desiccation events weaken a salt marsh mutualism

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    1. Salt marshes suffered largeā€scale degradation in recent decades. Extreme events such as hot and dry spells contributed significantly to this, and are predicted to increase not only in intensity, but also in frequency under future climate scenarios. Such repetitive extreme events may generate cumulative effects on ecosystem resilience. It is therefore important to elucidate how marsh vegetation responds to repetitive stress, and whether changes in key species interactions can modulate vegetation resilience.2. In this study, we investigated how moderate but repetitive desiccation events, caused by the combined effects of drought and high temperatures, affect cordgrass (<i>Spartina alterniflora</i>), the dominant habitatā€forming grass in southeastern US salt marshes. In a 4ā€month field experiment, we simulated four consecutive desiccation events by periodically excluding tidal flooding and rainfall, while raising temperature. We crossed this desiccation treatment with the presence/absence of ribbed mussels (<i>Geukensia demissa</i>) ā€“ a mutualist of cordgrass known to enhance its desiccation resilience ā€“ and with grazing pressure by the marsh periwinkle (<i>Littoraria irrorate</i>) that is known to suppress cordgrassā€™ desiccation resilience. 3. We found that each subsequent desiccation event deteriorated sediment porewater conditions, resulting in high salinity (53 ppt), low pHā€levels (3.7) and increased porewater Al and Fe concentrations (ā‰ˆ800 Ī¼mol/L and ā‰ˆ1,500 Ī¼mol/L) upon rewetting. No effects on porewater chemistry were found as a result of snail grazing, while ribbed mussels strongly mitigated desiccation effects almost to control levels and increased cordgrass biomass by approximately 128%. Importantly, although cordgrass generally appeared healthy aboveā€ground at the end of the experiment, we found clear negative responses of the repetitive desiccation treatment on cordgrass belowā€ground biomass, on proline (osmolyte) levels in shoots and on the number of tillers (āˆ’40%), regardless of mussel and/or snail presence.4. <i>Synthesis</i>. Even though the mutualism with mussels strongly mitigated chemical effects in the sediment porewater throughout the experiment, mussels could not buffer the adverse ecophysiological effects observed in cordgrass tissue. Our results therefore suggest that although mussels may alleviate desiccation stress, the predicted increased frequency and intensity of hot dry spells may eventually affect saltmarsh resilience by stressing the mutualism beyond its buffering capacity

    Foundation species enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation

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    Food webs are an integral part of every ecosystem on the planet, yet understanding the mechanisms shaping these complex networks remains a major challenge. Recently, several studies suggested that non-trophic species interactions such as habitat modification and mutualisms can be important determinants of food web structure. However, it remains unclear whether these findings generalize across ecosystems, and whether non-trophic interactions affect food webs randomly, or affect specific trophic levels or functional groups. Here, we combine analyses of 58 food webs from seven terrestrial, freshwater and coastal systems to test (1) the general hypothesis that non-trophic facilitation by habitat-forming foundation species enhances food web complexity, and (2) whether these enhancements have either random or targeted effects on particular trophic levels, functional groups, and linkages throughout the food web. Our empirical results demonstrate that foundation species consistently enhance food web complexity in all seven ecosystems. Further analyses reveal that 15 out of 19 food web properties can be well-approximated by assuming that foundation species randomly facilitate species throughout the trophic network. However, basal species are less strongly, and carnivores are more strongly facilitated in foundation speciesā€™ food webs than predicted based on random facilitation, resulting in a higher mean trophic level and a longer average chain length. Overall, we conclude that foundation species strongly enhance food web complexity through non-trophic facilitation of species across the entire trophic network. We therefore suggest that the structure and stability of food webs often depends critically on non-trophic facilitation by foundation species.</p

    Interactive effects of oxygen, carbon dioxide and flow on photosynthesis and respiration in the scleractinian coral Galaxea fascicularis

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    Rates of dark respiration and net photosynthesis were measured for six replicate clonal fragments of the stony coral Galaxea fascicularis (Linnaeus 1767), which were incubated under 12 different combinations of dissolved oxygen (20%, 100% and 150% saturation), dissolved carbon dioxide (9.5 and 19.1 Ī¼mol l-1) and water flow (1-1.6 versus 4-13 cm s-1) in a repeated measures design. Dark respiration was enhanced by increased flow and increased oxygen saturation in an interactive way, which relates to improved oxygen influx into the coral tissue. Oxygen saturation did not influence net photosynthesis: neither hypoxia nor hyperoxia affected net photosynthesis, irrespective of flow and pH, which suggests that hyperoxia does not induce high rates of photorespiration in this coral. Flow and pH had a synergistic effect on net photosynthesis: at high flow, a decrease in pH stimulated net photosynthesis by 14%. These results indicate that for this individual of G. fascicularis, increased uptake of carbon dioxide rather than increased efflux of oxygen explains the beneficial effect of water flow on photosynthesis. Rates of net photosynthesis measured in this study are among the highest ever recorded for scleractinian corals and confirm a strong scope for growth.</p

    Mussel Addition Experiment: Ammonium Salinity Expansion Data

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    Data from a 2012 mussel addition experiment showing the concentration of ammonia and porewater salinity in cordgrass transplants either with mussels added or not added. In addition, data on the expansion (number of new tillers) observed after 8 months

    Ultrafast photoemission electron microscopy: Capability and potential in probing plasmonic nanostructures from multiple domains

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    The near-field properties and dynamics of plasmonic nanostructures play a crucial role in several fundamental concepts in physics and chemistry, and they are widely relevant in plasmonic applications. Ultrafast photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) is a novel approach that has been widely applied to probe plasmonic nanostructures from multiple domains. Furthermore, PEEM is the only technique that provides nanometer spatial resolution, sub-femtosecond temporal resolution, and tens to hundreds of millielectron volt energy resolution. This allows for extremely sensitive observations of plasmonic field oscillations, field dephasing, and hot electrons. This Perspective provides a brief overview of the basic principles and main applications of ultrafast PEEM. The research progress of ultrafast PEEM in plasmonics is highlighted from three points of view: near-field imaging, near-field spectroscopy, and ultrafast dynamics. Future applications of PEEM in plasmonics for the probing of plasmonic hot electron dynamics in the energy and time domains are proposed and discussed. (c) 2020 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Dataset-Repetitive desiccation events weaken a salt marsh mutualism

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    This dataset contains the data from a field experiment that was conducted from April 2014 till August 2014. We crossed the presence of mussels and snails with a desiccation treatment to test the hypotheses that: 1) multiple chemical stressors accumulate after each successive desiccation event, 2) mussels facilitate cordgrass by mitigating chemical stressors, and 3) snails reduce cordgrassā€™ resilience to withstand these stressors over time. The first data sheet shows data on cordgrass growth, mussels, chemical porewater and plant characteristics averaged per experimental plot. The second data sheet displays chemical porewater concentrations in four consecutive months. The third data sheet shows data about temperature en relative humidity

    Data from: Repetitive desiccation events weaken a salt marsh mutualism

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    Salt marshes suffered largeā€scale degradation in recent decades. Extreme events such as hot and dry spells contributed significantly to this, and are predicted to increase not only in intensity, but also in frequency under future climate scenarios. Such repetitive extreme events may generate cumulative effects on ecosystem resilience. It is therefore important to elucidate how marsh vegetation responds to repetitive stress, and whether changes in key species interactions can modulate vegetation resilience. In this study, we investigated how moderate but repetitive desiccation events, caused by the combined effects of drought and high temperatures, affect cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora), the dominant habitatā€forming grass in southeastern US salt marshes. In a 4ā€month field experiment, we simulated four consecutive desiccation events by periodically excluding tidal flooding and rainfall, while raising temperature. We crossed this desiccation treatment with the presence/absence of ribbed mussels (Geukensia demissa) ā€“ a mutualist of cordgrass known to enhance its desiccation resilience ā€“ and with grazing pressure by the marsh periwinkle (Littoraria irrorata) that is known to suppress cordgrassā€™ desiccation resilience. We found that each subsequent desiccation event deteriorated sediment porewater conditions, resulting in high salinity (53 ppt), low pHā€levels (3.7) and increased porewater Al and Fe concentrations (ā‰ˆ800 Ī¼mol/L and ā‰ˆ1,500 Ī¼mol/L) upon rewetting. No effects on porewater chemistry were found as a result of snail grazing, while ribbed mussels strongly mitigated desiccation effects almost to control levels and increased cordgrass biomass by approximately 128%. Importantly, although cordgrass generally appeared healthy aboveā€ground at the end of the experiment, we found clear negative responses of the repetitive desiccation treatment on cordgrass belowā€ground biomass, on proline (osmolyte) levels in shoots and on the number of tillers (āˆ’40%), regardless of mussel and/or snail presence. Synthesis. Even though the mutualism with mussels strongly mitigated chemical effects in the sediment porewater throughout the experiment, mussels could not buffer the adverse ecophysiological effects observed in cordgrass tissue. Our results therefore suggest that although mussels may alleviate desiccation stress, the predicted increased frequency and intensity of hot dry spells may eventually affect saltmarsh resilience by stressing the mutualism beyond its buffering capacity

    Soil water storage

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    Data on the grams of water stored per gram of soil from cores collected from inside and outside mussel mounds in a Sapelo Island, GA mars

    FL-SC Coastal Die off Survey

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    Data on the size of die-offs and patch distribution within those dieoffs observed at marsh sites located along the southeastern US coastlin
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