Wetland restoration

Porewater chemistry of natural and created marsh soils

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Publisher: 
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
Year: 
1991
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, E.D. Seneca and S.W. Broome

Twenty five years of ecosystem development of constructed Spartina alterniflora (Loisel) marshes

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Publisher: 
Ecological Applications
Year: 
1999
Authors: 
C. Craft, J. Reader, J.N. Sacco and S.W. Broome

Twenty five years of ecosystem development of constructed Spartina alterniflora marshes

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Publisher: 
Ecological Applications
Year: 
1999
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, J. Reader, J.N. Sacco and S.W. Broome

Fifteen years of vegetation and soil development after brackish-water marsh creation

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Publisher: 
Restoration Ecology
Year: 
2002
Authors: 
C.B. Craft, S.W. Broome and C.L. Campbell

Tidal Marsh Vegetation and Soil Development

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Data Holder: 
Craft, Christopher
Location:
Pamlico River estuary
Aurora
United States
Latitude: 35.300596
Longitude: -76.788594
Background
Continent: 
North America
Year LTSE Began: 
1983
On-going or Terminated?: 
On-going but no long-term endowment
Environment
Dominant plant species (latin genus and species): 
Spartina spp., Juncus roemerianus, Distichlis spicata
Ecoregion: 
Cool Temperate
Slope (%): 
0-2%
Elevation (m): 
0-200
Geological material: 
Coastal plain sediments

The pace of ecosystem development of constructed Spartina alterniflora marshes.

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Publisher: 
Ecological Applications
Year: 
2003
Authors: 
Craft, C.B., J.P. Megonigal, S.W. Broome, J. Cornell, R. Freese, R.J Stevenson, L. Zheng

Constructed and Natural Tidal Salt Marshes

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Data Holder: 
Craft, Christopher
Location:
Coastal North Carolina USA (Eight locations)
United States
Latitude:
Longitude:
Background
Continent: 
North America
Year LTSE Began: 
1988
On-going or Terminated?: 
On-going but no long-term endowment
Environment
Landuse: 
Other
Ecoregion: 
Cool Temperate
Slope (%): 
0-2%
Elevation (m): 
0-200
Geological material: 
Coastal plain sediments

Creating riverine wetlands: Ecological succession, nutrient retention, and pulsing effects

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Publisher: 
Ecological Engineering
Year: 
2005
Authors: 
Mitsch, William J., Li Zhang, Christopher J. Anderson, Anne E. Altor, Maria E. Hernandez
Abstract: 
Successional patterns, water quality changes, and effects of hydrologic pulsing are documented for a whole-ecosystem experiment involving two created wetlands that have been subjected to continuous inflow of pumped river water for more than 10 years. At the beginning of the growing season in the first year of the experiment (1994), 2400 individuals representing 13 macrophyte species were introduced to one of the wetland basins. The other basin was an unplanted control. Patterns of succession are illustrated by macrophyte community diversity and net aboveground primary productivity, soil development, water quality changes, and nutrient retention for the two basins. The planted wetland continued to be more diverse in plant cover 10 years after planting and the unplanted wetland appeared to be more productive but more susceptible to stress. Soil color and organic content continued to change after wetland creation and wetlands had robust features of hydric soils within a few years of flooding. Organic matter content in surface soils in the wetlands increased by approximately 1% per 3-year period. Plant diversity and species differences led to some differences in the basins in macrophyte productivity, carbon sequestration, water quality changes and nutrient retention. The wetlands continued to retain nitrate–nitrogen and soluble reactive phosphorus 10 years after their creation. There are some signs that sediment and total phosphorus retention are diminishing after 10 years of river flow. Preliminary results from the beginnings of a flood pulsing experiment in the two basins in 2003–2004 are described for water quality, nutrient retention, aboveground productivity, and methane and nitrous oxide gaseous fluxes. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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