EARTHSC 8898 Dr. Alicia Wilson -  Please Check Your Assumptions at the Coastline: 15 Years of Wading Through Salt Marshes

isotelus
October 20, 2023
1:45 pm - 3:00 pm
291 Mendenhall Laboratory

Date Range
2023-10-20 13:45:00 2023-10-20 15:00:00 EARTHSC 8898 Dr. Alicia Wilson -  Please Check Your Assumptions at the Coastline: 15 Years of Wading Through Salt Marshes Speaker: Dr. Alicia Wilson - Darcy Lecturer  Seminar Title: Please Check Your Assumptions at the Coastline: 15 Years of Wading Through Salt Marshes Abstract: The field of hydrogeology is well known for its roots in water supply and contaminant remediation, but hydrogeologists are a highly adaptable group who can make critical contributions to — and learn from — a wide range of other fields. This talk describes 15 years of progress in understanding the ecohydrology of salt marshes, including everything from how to construct a well in a setting where water levels rise and fall by meters every day to the influence of groundwater flow on plant zonation and carbon cycling. Current research in salt marsh ecohydrology reaches in multiple directions, including the importance of crab burrows for solute and gas exchange in the root zone, the impact of stressors like drought and sea level rise on salt marsh migration, and the role of salt marshes as buffers for development. Carbon budgets for salt marshes are another area of continuing research. Future research will bring improved knowledge of biogeochemical cycling in salt marshes and has the potential to bring advanced ecohydrologic models that address salt marsh migration and restoration as well as atmospheric exchange. Host: Audrey Sawyer and Yanlan Liu Zoom Link 291 Mendenhall Laboratory America/New_York public

Speaker: Dr. Alicia Wilson - Darcy Lecturer 

Seminar Title: Please Check Your Assumptions at the Coastline: 15 Years of Wading Through Salt Marshes

Abstract: The field of hydrogeology is well known for its roots in water supply and contaminant remediation, but hydrogeologists are a highly adaptable group who can make critical contributions to — and learn from — a wide range of other fields. This talk describes 15 years of progress in understanding the ecohydrology of salt marshes, including everything from how to construct a well in a setting where water levels rise and fall by meters every day to the influence of groundwater flow on plant zonation and carbon cycling. Current research in salt marsh ecohydrology reaches in multiple directions, including the importance of crab burrows for solute and gas exchange in the root zone, the impact of stressors like drought and sea level rise on salt marsh migration, and the role of salt marshes as buffers for development. Carbon budgets for salt marshes are another area of continuing research. Future research will bring improved knowledge of biogeochemical cycling in salt marshes and has the potential to bring advanced ecohydrologic models that address salt marsh migration and restoration as well as atmospheric exchange.

Host: Audrey Sawyer and Yanlan Liu

Zoom Link