“…Wetland ecosystems are defined by complex disturbance regimes that control vegetation communities (Kirkman et al, 2000; Sharitz & Pennings, 2006; Ward et al, 2002) including both spatially and temporally variable hydrologic conditions (Wheeler, 1999) and other disturbance agents such as fire (e.g., Davis et al, 2002). Plant composition in turn creates feedbacks to geomorphology (Gurnell, 2014), biogeochemistry (Li et al, 2014; Valtera et al, 2021), and hydrology (Muneepeerakul et al, 2008; Scott et al, 2006), which can lead to ecological instability if the type, magnitude, frequency, or duration of disturbances change (Foti et al, 2013). However, it can be difficult to isolate specific causal processes for ecological changes in individual wetlands, both because there are often multiple alterations and because specific mechanisms controlling ecosystems are not sufficiently understood.…”