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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Fate of Nitrogen in Dredged Material Used for Tidal Marsh Restoration

Lorie W. Staver    
Jeffrey C. Cornwell    
Nicholas J. Nidzieko    
Kenneth W. Staver    
J. Court Stevenson    
Michael Owens    
Walter Boynton and Leysa Lopez-Gonzalez    

Resumen

Tidal marsh restoration using dredged material is being undertaken in many coastal areas to replace lost habitat and ecosystem services due to tidal marsh loss. The fate of high levels of nitrogen (N) in fine-grained dredged material used as a substrate for marsh restoration is uncertain, but if exported tidally may cause subtidal habitat degradation. In this study, a mass balance was developed to characterize N fluxes in a two-year-old restored tidal marsh constructed with fine-grained dredged material at Poplar Island, MD, in Chesapeake Bay, and to evaluate the potential impact on the adjacent submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) habitat. Denitrification and N accumulation in Spartina organic matter were identified as the major sinks (21.31 and 28.5 mg N m-2 d-1, respectively), while tidal export of TN was more modest (9.4 mg N m-2 d-1) and inorganic N export was low (1.59 mg N m-2 d-1). Internal cycling helped retain N within the marsh. Mineralization of N associated with labile organic matter in the dredged material was likely a large, but unquantified, source of N supporting robust plant growth and N exports. Exceedances of SAV water quality habitat requirements in the subtidal region adjacent to the marsh were driven by elevated Chesapeake Bay concentrations rather than enrichment by the marsh.

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