1999
DOI: 10.1046/j.1442-9993.1999.00984.x
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Tropical mangrove ecology: Physical and biotic factors influencing ecosystem structure and function

Abstract: Our understanding of the ecology of tropical mangals has strong practical implications for the management and conservation of these threatened ecosystems. Earlier models of tropical mangals proposed overwhelming influences by physical forces and processes such as the tidal regime or geomorphology on ecosystem structure and function. Recent findings from especially the Indo-Pacific mangals suggest also considerable influence from biotic agents and processes such as sesarmine crab feeding and bioturbation activi… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…According to the "environmental setting hypothesis" (Twilley, 1985), geomorphological features and hydrology are the most important abiotic factors affecting the exchange of mangrove material across ecosystem boundaries (Adame and Lovelock, 2011;Lee, 1999). In particular, the combined control of river discharge (magnitude and frequency), tidal amplitude, rainfall, and wave action is reported to influence the exchange of material across boundaries in estuarine mangrove systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the "environmental setting hypothesis" (Twilley, 1985), geomorphological features and hydrology are the most important abiotic factors affecting the exchange of mangrove material across ecosystem boundaries (Adame and Lovelock, 2011;Lee, 1999). In particular, the combined control of river discharge (magnitude and frequency), tidal amplitude, rainfall, and wave action is reported to influence the exchange of material across boundaries in estuarine mangrove systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fate of organic detritus in mangrove ecosystems has been the focus of several biological and geochemical studies (see reviews in , Lee 1995, Schwamborn & Saint-Paul 1996, Lee 1999. It is generally believed that food webs in mangrove forests and adjacent aquatic ecosystems are closely linked by several interaction processes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some species remain in these nursery estuaries until they are sexually mature (Elliott and Hemingway, 2008). Mangrove estuaries are ecosystems described by environmental fluctuations and directly will have an important influence on the structure of the larval fish assemblages (Feller and Sitnik, 1996;Lee, 1999;Ooi and Chong, 2011). Successful recruitment and retention of fish larvae in estuaries which function as nursery areas are strategies adopted by the early life stages of many fish species (Boehlert and Mundy, 1988;Islam and Tanaka, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%