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Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality
by
Silliman, Brian R.
, Li, Chunming
, Bertness, Mark D.
, Liao, Xiaolin
, Ramus, Aaron P.
, He, Qiang
, Angelini, Christine
, Chen, Jianshe
, Liu, Lingli
in
49/23
/ 631/158/672
/ 704/158/854
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic plants
/ Bioturbation
/ Brachyura
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystem restoration
/ Field tests
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Indigenous plants
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nature-based solutions
/ Plants
/ Poaceae - metabolism
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Prey
/ Rewilding
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Spartina
/ Trophic levels
/ Vegetation
/ Wetlands
2023
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Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality
by
Silliman, Brian R.
, Li, Chunming
, Bertness, Mark D.
, Liao, Xiaolin
, Ramus, Aaron P.
, He, Qiang
, Angelini, Christine
, Chen, Jianshe
, Liu, Lingli
in
49/23
/ 631/158/672
/ 704/158/854
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic plants
/ Bioturbation
/ Brachyura
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystem restoration
/ Field tests
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Indigenous plants
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nature-based solutions
/ Plants
/ Poaceae - metabolism
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Prey
/ Rewilding
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Spartina
/ Trophic levels
/ Vegetation
/ Wetlands
2023
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Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality
by
Silliman, Brian R.
, Li, Chunming
, Bertness, Mark D.
, Liao, Xiaolin
, Ramus, Aaron P.
, He, Qiang
, Angelini, Christine
, Chen, Jianshe
, Liu, Lingli
in
49/23
/ 631/158/672
/ 704/158/854
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic plants
/ Bioturbation
/ Brachyura
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystem restoration
/ Field tests
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Indigenous plants
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nature-based solutions
/ Plants
/ Poaceae - metabolism
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Prey
/ Rewilding
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sediments
/ Spartina
/ Trophic levels
/ Vegetation
/ Wetlands
2023
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Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality
Journal Article
Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality
2023
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Overview
Ecosystem restoration has traditionally focused on re-establishing vegetation and other foundation species at basal trophic levels, with mixed outcomes. Here, we show that threatened shorebirds could be important to restoring coastal wetland multifunctionality. We carried out surveys and manipulative field experiments in a region along the Yellow Sea affected by the invasive cordgrass
Spartina alterniflora
. We found that planting native plants alone failed to restore wetland multifunctionality in a field restoration experiment. Shorebird exclusion weakened wetland multifunctionality, whereas mimicking higher predation before shorebird population declines by excluding their key prey – crab grazers – enhanced wetland multifunctionality. The mechanism underlying these effects is a simple trophic cascade, whereby shorebirds control crab grazers that otherwise suppress native vegetation recovery and destabilize sediments (via bioturbation). Our findings suggest that harnessing the top-down effects of shorebirds – through habitat conservation, rewilding, or temporary simulation of consumptive or non-consumptive effects – should be explored as a nature-based solution to restoring the multifunctionality of degraded coastal wetlands.
Ecological restoration success may depend on interactions between multiple trophic levels. Here, the authors show that top-down control of crab grazers by shorebirds could help rebuild wetland multifunctionality after invasive cordgrass eradication.
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