W4835XWETLANDS AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Fall 2001, T,Th 10-11:15

506 Schermerhorn

D. Peteet, Instructor

N. Pederson, TA

Suggested Text and Readings:

Mitsch, W.J.&Gosselink, J.G.2000, Wetlands, 3rd edition, John Wiley and Sons, NY, and weekly readings on current problems which will be announced.

Course Evaluation:

The course will include a midterm, final, 3 field trips with lab write-ups, and weekly readings and discussion.

Course Credit: 3 points

Week 1. Sept. 4,6 Introduction

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chaps. 1-4

A. Importance of Wetlands

B. Wetland definitions and examples

Add. References:

Gore, l983

Week 2. Sept 11,12

Hydrological cycles in wetlands

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chap. 5

A. Overall water budgets

B. Specific Effects of Hydrology on Wetlands

Add. References

Nixon and Oviatt, l973

Gilman, l982

Junk, l982

Week 3. Sept. 18,20

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Ch. 6

Biogeochemistry of various wetland types

A. Nutrient cycles and energy flow

B. Primary productivity & decomposition

C. Ecosystem Models

Add. References:

Bubier et al. l996

Wiegert et al., l981

Week 4. Sept. 25,27

Inland Wetland Ecosystems - structure & function

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chapter 12,14,15

A. Freshwater Swamps & Riparian Systems

B. Inland Freshwater Marshes

Everglades, Great Lakes, Playas

Add. References:

Hofstetter, l983

Caulfield, 1970

Guthery et al., l982

September 29 2001

FIELD TRIP #1 (Harriman Park Forest – Northern Swamp & Riparian Wetland)

Species identification, distribution, richness

Coring techniques

Week 5. Oct 2,4

Southern Swamps - structure & function

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chapter 14

Add. References:

Cohen et al., l984,

Clark, l979

Brinson et al., l981

Mitsch and Ewel, l979

Week 6. Oct 9,11

Ecological Adaptations, Ecosystem Pattern and Process

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chaps 7,8

A. Plants

B. Animals

C. Succession, continuum, & ecosystem functions

Add. References:

McLeod et al., l988

Scholander et al., 1955, l966

Vernberg and Vernberg, l972

Chapman, l960

van der Valk, l982

Week 7 Oct 16 Midterm

Oct 18 Coastal Wetland Ecosystems- structure & function

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chapter 11

A. Mangrove Wetlands

Week 9 Oct 23,25

Coastal Wetland Ecosystems- structure & function

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chaps 9,10

A. Tidal Salt Marshes

B. Tidal Freshwater Marshes

Add. References:

Armentano, l990

Eleuterius, L.N. l981

Fassett, N.C. 1940.

Redfield, l965, l972

Nixon and Lee, l985

Odum et al., l984

Odum & McIvor, l990

Gosselink et al., l984

October 27

FIELD TRIP #2 (Tidal Marsh, Staten Island, NY)

Species identification, plant distribution,

salinity, remediation discussions

Week 10. Oct 30, 31

Northern Peatlands - structure & function

(Emphasis on Alaska, Canada, & Siberia)

Reading: Mitsch and Gosselink, Chapter 13

A. Bogs

B. Fens

Add. References:

Heusser, l960

Johnson, l985

Moore, l974

Wright et al., l992,

Week 11. Nov 6 Holiday, Election Day

Nov. 8 Paleoecology papers on bogs

Nov. 10

FIELD TRIP #3 (Green Pond & Bog, NY)

Week 12. Nov 13,15

Paleovegetation & Paleoenvironment from Wetlands - laboratory instruction

A.Palynology

B. Diatoms

C. Macrofossils

D. Isotopes

Add. References:

Faegri and Iversen, l975

Berglund, l979

Wright et al., l992

Week 12 Nov. 20

Papers- Landscape Processes Recorded in Wetlands

-lab instruction

A. Fire - charcoal

B. Hydrological change- bryophytes

C. Earthquakes - discontinuities

D. Eutrophication, acidification - geochemical signals

E. Isostatic uplift

Add. References:

Berglund, l979

Clark, l985

November 22 – Thanksgiving Holiday

Week 13. Nov 27, 29

Past Climate change from Wetlands

List of papers to report on - regional emphasis

Carbon Cycle in Wetlands

A. Northern peatlands, source or sink?

B. Carbon exchange with climate change

Add. References:

Oeschel et al., l993

Bubier et al., l993

Week 14. Dec 4,6

Wetland Valuation & Management

Reading: Chaps. 16, 17

Add. References:

Turner et al., l981

Gosselink and Baumann, l980

Add. References:

1987 Corps of Engineers, Wetlands Deliniation Manual

Cowardin et al., l979

Gosselink and Baumann, l980

Turner et al., l981

Frayer et al., l983

Environmental Defense Fund and World Wildlife Fund, l992

Dahl and Johnson, l991

Meeks and Runyon, l990

ADDITIONAL REFERENCES

Armentano, T. l990. Soils and ecology: tropical wetlands, in Wetlands: A Threatened Landscape, M. Williams, ed. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 115-144.

Barnes, R.S.K. The Brackish-water Fauna of Northwestern Europe. Cambridge Univ. Press, 1994

Berglund, B.E. (Editor). Handbook of Holocene Paleoecology and Paleohydrology, John Wiley & Sons, 1986.

Brinson, M.M., Swift, B.L., Plantico, R.C., and Barclay, J.S. l981. Riparian Ecosystems: their Ecology and Status. US Fish & Wildlife Svc,, Biol. Serv. Prog., FWS/OBS-81/17, Washington, D.C. l5l p.

Bubier, J.L., Moore, T.R., and Roulet, N.R. 1993. Methane emissions from wetlands in the mid-boreal region of northern Ontario, Canada. Ecology 74: 2240-2254.

Caulfield, P. l970. Everglades, Ballantine Books, Inc. NY 143 p.

Clark, J.E. l979. Fresh water wetlands: habitats for aquatic invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, and fish. In Wetland Functions and Values: the State of our Understanding. P.E. Greeson, J.R. Clark, and J.E. Clark, Eds., American Water Wetlands Ecology and Management (SPB Academic Publishing, NY, 1992-1996) Resources Assn., Minneapolis, Minn. 33-343.

Cohen, A.D., D.J. Casagrande, M.J. Andrejko, and G.R. Best, eds., l984, The Okefenokee Swamp, Wetland Surveys, Los Alamos, NM, 709 pg.

Corps of Engineers, Wetlands Deliniation Manual

Cowardin et al., l979 Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the US, US Fish and Wildlife Service Publ. FWS/OBS-79/31, Washington, DC 103 p.

Crum, A. Mosses of Eastern North America, Columbia Univ. Press.

Dahl, T. E. and C.E. Johnson, l991. Wetlands Status and Trends in the Conterminous United States Mid-1970s to mid-l980s., US Dept. of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Svc, Washington, DC 28 p.

Duncan, W.H. and M.B. Duncan, The Smithsonian Guide to Seaside Plants of the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts, Smithsonian Inst. Press

Eleuterius, L.N. l981.,Tidal Marsh Plants, Ocean Springs, Miss.

Environmental Defense Fund and World Wildlife Fund, l992, How Wet is a Wetland? The impact of the Proposed Revisions to the Federal Wetlands Deliniation Manual, EDF and WWF, Washington, DC, 175 p.

Fassett, N.C. 1940. A Manual of Aquatic Plants, Univ. Wisc. Press

Faegri, K., and Iversen, J. Textbook of Pollen Analysis, Hafner Press, 1975.

Frayer,W.E., Monahan, D.C., Bowden, D.C., and Graybill, F.A. l983. Status and trends of wetlands and deepwater habitat in the conterminous US, l950s to l970s. Dept. of Forest and Wood Sciences, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, 32 p.

Gore, A.J.P. Mires: Swamp, Bog, Fen, and Moor. Ecosystems of the World. l983. Elsevier Scientific Publishing Co.

Gosselink, J.G. and Baumann, R.H. l980. Wetland inventories: wetland loss along the US coast. Z. Geomorphol. N.F. Suppl. Bd. 34: 173- 187.

Gosselink, J.G., R. Hatton, and C.S. Hopkinson, l984. Relationship of organic carbon and mineral content to bulk density in Louisiana marsh soils. Soil Science 137: 177-180.

Guthery, F.S., Pates, J.M., and F.A. Stormer. l982. Characterization of playas of the north-central Llano Estacado in Texas. 47th Am. Wild. Nat. Resource Conf. Trans. 47: 516-527.

Haworth, E.Y. and Lund, J.W. l984. Lake Sediments and Environmental History. Univ. of Minn. Press, Minneapolis, MN.

Hofstetter, R. H. l983. Wetlands in the United States. in Ecosystems of the World, vol. 4B, Mires: Swamp, Bog, Fen and Moore. A.J>P> Gore, editor, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 201-244.

Heusser, C.J. l960. Late Pleistocene Environments of North Pacific North America. Amer. Geogr. Society Special Publ. no. 35, NY.

Isleib, M.E. and B. Kessel, Birds of the North Gulf Coast - Prince William Sound Region, Alaska, Univ. of Alaska Press, l973.

Johnsen, C.W. l985. Bogs of the Northeast. Univ. Press of New England.

Meeks, G. and and L.C. Runyon. l990. Wetlands Protection and the States. National Conference of State Legislatures., Denver, Colo. 26 pg.

Milner, A.M., and Oswood, M.W. l996. Freshwaters of Alaska, Springer-Verlag, NY

Mitsch, W.J. and Ewel, K.C. l979. Comparative biomass and growth of cypress in Florida wetlands. Amer. Midland Naturalist 101: 417-426.

Mitsch, W.J. and J.G. Gosselink, Wetlands, 1986, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York

Moore, P.D. l974. Peatlands. Springer-Verlag, NY.

Nixon, S.W. and V. Lee. l985. Wetlands and water quality- a regional review of recent research in the US on the role of fresh and saltwater wetlands as sources, sinks, and transformers of nitrogen, phosphorus, and various heavy metals. Report to the Waterways Experiment Station, US Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg, Miss.

Odum, W.E., T.J. Smith III, J.K. Hoover, and C.C. McIvor, l984. The Ecology of Tidal Freshwater Marshes of the United States East Coast: a Community Profile, US Fish and Wildlife Service, FWS/OBS-87/17, Washington, D.C. 177 p.

Odum, W.E. and McIvor, C.C. l990, Mangroves, in Ecosystems of Florida, R.L. Myers and J.J. Ewel, eds., Univ. of Central Florida Press, Orlando, pp. 517-548.

Oeschel, W.C. et al., 1993. Recent change of Arctic tundra ecosystems from a net carbon sink to a source. Nature 361: 520-523.

Oeschel, W.C., Global Change and Arctic Terrestrial Ecosystems,Springer-Verlag, NY

Paavilainen, E., and J. Paivanen, Peatland Forestry, 1995, Springer-Verlag, NY

Patten, B.C. Wetlands and Shallow Continental Water Bodies, Vol 1 Natural and Human Relationships, and Vol. 2, Case Studies, SPB Academic Publishing.

Redfield, A.C. l965, Ontogeny of a salt marsh estuary. Science 147: 50-55.

Redfield, A.C. l972.Development of a New England salt marsh. Ecological Monographs 42: 201-237.

Turner, R.E., Forsythe, S.W., and Craig, N.J. l981. Bottomland hardwood forest land resources of the southeastern US, in Wetlands of Bottomland Hardwood Forests, J.R. Clark and J. Benforado, eds, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 13-28.

Wetlands Ecology and Management (SPB Academic Publishing, NY, 1992-1996)

Wiegert, R.G., Christian, R.R., and Wetzel, R.L. l981. A model view of the marsh, in The Ecology of A Salt Marsh, L.R. Pomeroy and R.G. Wiegert, Eds., Springer-Verlag, NY, p. 183-218.

Wright, H.E., Coffin, B.A., and Aaseng, N.E. l992. The Patterned Peatlands of Minnesota. Univ. of Minn. Press, Minneapolis, MN.