ASSESSING INITIAL IMPACT
Remote Sensing
Mapping and Analysis of Marsh Dieback and Residential Piers in Coastal Georgia. Karen Payne (Univ of Georgia Marine Extension Service)
Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Coastal Marsh Dieback in Louisiana, 2000 – 2002, as Determined from Aerial Surveys. Thomas C. Michot , Christopher J. Wells (U. S. Geological Survey), R. Scott Kemmerer (Johnson Controls World Services)
Characterization of Brown Marsh Progression and/or Recovery Using Landsat 7 Satellite Imagery (2000-2001). Andrew Beall and Shea Penland (Univ. of New Orleans)
Monitoring
Quarterly Monitoring of Marsh Dieback Sites in Coastal Georgia. Janice Flory (Georgia Coastal Research Council) and Matt Ogburn (Univ. of Georgia)
Coastwide Survey of Marsh Dieback in Georgia. Matt Ogburn and Merryl Alber (Univ. of Georgia)
Plant and Soil Characterizations in a Spartina alterniflora Saltmarsh Experiencing Dieback in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, USA. Thomas C. Michot (U. S. Geological Survey) R. Scott Kemmerer (Johnson Controls World Services)
CAUSATION
Weather, Hydrology, Elevation
Field Investigation into Hydrologic Drivers of Brown Marsh Formation and Potential Surface Erosion. Chris Swarzenski (U. S. Geological Survey)
Soil Effects, Plant/Soil Interactions
Investigation of Potential Causes of Salt Marsh Dieback in Georgia: a Transplant Study. Matt Ogburn and Merryl Alber (Univ. of Georgia)
Acute Salt Marsh Dieback in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain: Survey of Multiple Sites in Barataria and Terrebonne Basins. Karen McKee (U.S. Geological Survey)
Integrative Approach to Understanding the Causes of Salt Marsh Dieback: Determination of Salt Marsh Species Tolerance Limits to Potential Environmental Stressors and Simulation of Salt Marsh Dieback – Photosynthetic Response (Task II.1) Mark W. Hester, Jonathan M. Willis (University of New Orleans), and Irving Mendelssohn (Louisiana State Univ.)
Integrative Approach to Understanding the Causes of Salt Marsh Dieback: Experimental Manipulations of Hydrology and Soil Biogeochemistry (Task II.2). Robert R. Twilley (Univ. of Louisiana at Lafayette)
Extensive Dieback of Non-saline Coastal Marshes in Louisiana, 1999 to 2001. George Melancon (Louisiana Dept of Wildlife and Fisheries)
Fungal Pathogens
Are Pathogenic Fungi Associated with Areas of Marsh Dieback? David Porter (Univ. of Georgia)
Role of Pathogens in the Brown Marsh Syndrome and Development of Direct Seeding Technology for Planting Spartina alterniflora. Raymond W. Schneider (Louisiana State Univ.)
Herbivores
Analysis of Shoot and Root Systems of Spartina alterniflora from Dead Marsh Sites in Coastal Georgia. Chandra Franklin and Whitney Palefsky (Savannah State Univ.)
Top-down and Bottom Forces Interact to Cause Massive Marsh Die Back. Brian Silliman and Mark Bertness (Brown University)
INTEGRATION
Modeling
Integrative Approach to Understanding the Causes of Salt Marsh Dieback:Coupled Hydrologic/Ecological Models of Marsh Dieback Processes (Task II.6). Robert R. Twilley (Univ. of Louisiana at Lafayette)
RECOVERY AND RESTORATION
The Evaluation of Brown Marsh Recovery on Talahi Island, Chatham County, GA. Mary Carla Curran (Savannah State Univ.)