Salt marshes are valuable coastal ecosystems, but many have been degraded by roads, railways, and other infrastructure that restrict tidal flow and impound watershed runoff. Restoration of tidal flow to tide-restricted salt marshes generally aims to restore native vegetation and habitat functions. Biological communities may take one or more decades to recover following tidal restoration, but outcomes are seldom assessed on that timescale. We assessed the long-term outcomes of eight tidal restorations in Rhode Island, USA using observed changes in plant and nekton communities from pre-restoration to present, and newly-collected data from a rapid assessment method. The time-series vegetation and nekton data suggest that while restoration actions promoted biological recovery, ambient factors such as inundation stress and eutrophication have worked to offset it. Rapid assessment results indicate that the cover of Phragmites australis is higher and the cover of meadow high marsh is lower at restoration marshes compared with a broad reference sample, suggesting incomplete recovery on average, although outcomes varied across the restoration marshes. Habitat integrity increased with the degree of adaptive management following restoration, as well as the age of restoration, but salt marsh restoration practitioners may need to shift their methods and expectations to accommodate human influences on ambient environmental conditions, particularly prevalent, increasing inundation stress associated with sea-level rise. Our study highlights the value of standardized long-term biological monitoring in assessing salt marsh restoration outcomes, and demonstrates how rapid assessment data can add valuable context to restoration findings.
Keywords: Biological assessment; Inundation stress; Phragmites australis; Rapid assessment; Salt-marsh vegetation; Sea-level rise.
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