2011
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.187
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Salt marsh harvest mouse demography and habitat use in the Suisun Marsh, California

Abstract: We undertook a 2-year (2002)(2003)(2004) mark-recapture study to investigate demographic performance and habitat use of salt marsh harvest mice (Reithrodontomys raviventris halicoetes) in the Suisun Marsh. We examined the effects of different wetland types and microhabitats on 3 demographic variables: density, reproductive potential, and persistence. Our results indicate that microhabitats dominated by mixed vegetation or pickleweed (Salicornia spp.) supported similar salt marsh harvest mouse densities, reprod… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…With long residence times in anoxic wetland sediments, non-labile organic matter constitutes a coastal carbon storage pool (Ouyang & Lee 2014), while wetland loss can release large quantities of sequestered carbon into the atmosphere (Pendleton et al 2012). The aboveground physical structure of salt marsh plants also provides other important coastal ecosystem services such as attenuating wave energy (Shepard et al 2011), facil-itating sediment accretion (Gleason et al 1979, Mudd et al 2010, and providing habitat for wetlanddependent vertebrates (Sustaita et al 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With long residence times in anoxic wetland sediments, non-labile organic matter constitutes a coastal carbon storage pool (Ouyang & Lee 2014), while wetland loss can release large quantities of sequestered carbon into the atmosphere (Pendleton et al 2012). The aboveground physical structure of salt marsh plants also provides other important coastal ecosystem services such as attenuating wave energy (Shepard et al 2011), facil-itating sediment accretion (Gleason et al 1979, Mudd et al 2010, and providing habitat for wetlanddependent vertebrates (Sustaita et al 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RERA individuals are thought to disperse randomly during prebreeding, but are associated with pickleweed sites with midrange salinity levels during breeding and postbreeding (Padgett‐Flohr & Isakson, ). In Suisun Bay, RERA were associated with sites dominated with mixed vegetation or pickleweed (Sustaita, Quickert, Patterson, Barthman‐Thompson, & Estrella, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We obtained the samples used in this study (Table S1, available online in Supporting Information; see also Sustaita et al ) during long‐term salt marsh harvest mouse population surveys, and targeted western harvest mouse trapping throughout the Suisun Marsh, Solano County, California (122° 0’ W, 38° 10’ N), from 1999–2004 (California Department of Water Resources , ; Sustaita et al ). The Suisun Marsh consisted of diked marshes managed for waterfowl and other wildlife, relatively unaltered tidal marsh, uplands, bays, sloughs, and other waterways (California Department of Water Resources [CDWR] , Sustaita et al ). The annual precipitation was 38–50 cm, with temperatures averaging 8° C in January and 22° C in July.…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The congeneric western harvest mouse ( R. megalotis ) is geographically widespread and inhabits most of California and contiguous states. The western harvest mouse occurs in a diversity of vegetation types and in San Francisco and associated bays, it overlaps the range of, and coexists with, both salt marsh harvest mouse subspecies (Fisler , Shellhammer , Webster and Jones , Bias and Morrison , Sustaita et al ). This presents a problem for identifying and monitoring salt marsh harvest mouse populations in the field because of difficulties distinguishing between some ambiguous individuals with intermediate morphology (Hooper , Fisler , Bias and Morrison , Statham et al ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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