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      Monitoring food web changes in tide-restored salt marshes: A carbon stable isotope approach

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      Estuaries and Coasts
      Springer Nature

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          Multiple stable isotopes used to trace the flow of organic matter in estuarine food webs.

          The use of a combination of the stable isotopes of sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen allows the flow of organic matter and trophic relations in salt marshes and estuaries to be traced while eliminating many ambiguities that accompany the use of a single isotopic tracer. Salt-marsh grasses take up the isotopically light sulfides formed during sulfate reduction, and the transfer of this light sulfur through the marsh food web is illustrated with data on the ribbed mussel (Geukensia demissa) from various locations in a New England marsh. The multiple isotope approach shows that this filter feeder consumes both marsh grass ( Spartina) detritus and plankton, with the relative proportions of each determined by the location of the mussels in the marsh.
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            Tracking Wetland Restoration: Do Mitigation Sites Follow Desired Trajectories?

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              Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope composition of aquatic and terrestrial plants of the San Francisco Bay estuarine system

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Estuaries and Coasts
                Estuaries and Coasts
                Springer Nature
                1559-2723
                1559-2731
                August 2006
                August 2006
                : 29
                : 4
                : 568-578
                Article
                10.1007/BF02784283
                799f73ba-58b4-4b0e-8416-b7d7f163da82
                © 2006
                History

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