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Literature review of organic matter transport from marshesA conceptual model for estimating a transport coefficient for the movement of nonliving organic matter from wetlands to the adjacent embayments was developed in a manner that makes it compatible with the Earth Resources Laboratory's Productive Capacity Model. The model, which envisages detritus movement from wetland pixels to the nearest land-water boundary followed by movement within the water column from tidal creeks to the adjacent embayment, can be transposed to deal with only the interaction between tidal water and the marsh or to estimate the transport from embayments to the adjacent coastal waters. The outwelling hypothesis postulated wetlands as supporting coastal fisheries either by exporting nutrients, such as inorganic nitrogen, which stimulated the plankton-based grazing food chain in the water column, or through the export of dissolved and particulate organic carbon which provided a benthic, detritus-based food web which provides the food source for the grazing food chain in a more indirect fashion.
Document ID
19830021479
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Technical Publication (TP)
Authors
Dow, D. D.
(NASA Earth Resources Lab. Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Date Acquired
September 4, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 1982
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
E83-10352
NASA-TP-2022
NAS 1.60:2022
Report Number: E83-10352
Report Number: NASA-TP-2022
Report Number: NAS 1.60:2022
Accession Number
83N29750
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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