| Literature DB >> 29900075 |
Reuben G Biel1, Joseph K Brown2, Sally D Hacker3, Katya R Jay3, Rebecca S Mostow3, Peter Ruggiero4, Julie C Zinnert2, Evan B Goldstein1, Elsemarie V Mullins1, Laura J Moore1.
Abstract
Previous work on the US Atlantic coast has generally shown that coastal foredunes are dominated by two dune grass species, Ammophila breviligulata (American beachgrass) and Uniola paniculata (sea oats). From Virginia northward, A. breviligulata dominates, while U. paniculata is the dominant grass south of Virginia. Previous work suggests that these grasses influence the shape of coastal foredunes in species-specific ways, and that they respond differently to environmental stressors; thus, it is important to know which species dominates a given dune system. The range boundaries of these two species remains unclear given the lack of comprehensive surveys. In an attempt to determine these boundaries, we conducted a literature survey of 98 studies that either stated the range limits and/or included field-based studies/observations of the two grass species. We then produced an interactive map that summarizes the locations of the surveyed papers and books. The literature review suggests that the current southern range limit for A. breviligulata is Cape Fear, NC, and the northern range limit for U. paniculata is Assateague Island, on the Maryland and Virginia border. Our data suggest a northward expansion of U. paniculata, possibly associated with warming trends observed near the northern range limit in Painter, VA. In contrast, the data regarding a range shift for A. breviligulata remain inconclusive. We also compare our literature-based map with geolocated records from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and iNaturalist research grade crowd-sourced observations. We intend for our literature-based map to aid coastal researchers who are interested in the dynamics of these two species and the potential for their ranges to shift as a result of climate change.Entities:
Keywords: Ammophila breviligulata; Coastal Dunes; Uniola paniculata
Year: 2018 PMID: 29900075 PMCID: PMC5996817 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
References used in construction of the interactive map.
| Species | Citation |
|---|---|
Note:
A total of 82 citations; 22 for Ammophila breviligulata, 30 for Uniola paniculata, and 30 for both species.
References with mentions to range limits.
| Species | Citation |
|---|---|
Note:
A total of 24 citations; 10 for Ammophila breviligulata, six for Uniola paniculata, and eight for both species.
Figure 1Dataset composition.
Dates for all referenced work for each species in our dataset, binned every five years.
Figure 2Range limits.
Southern range limit for A. breviligulata (A) and northern range limit U. paniculata (B), extracted from literature sources of various age. Points are specific geographic mentions, while lines are ambiguous geographical references (e.g., “Southern North Carolina,” “Virginia Capes”). Dotted lines demarcate state boundaries.
Figure 3Static snapshot of interactive map.
A static snapshot of the interactive map (Supplemental Information 3). The map background is OpenStreetMap data (https://www.openstreetmap.org). Each circle marker corresponds to a literature mention of a given species (orange for A. breviligulata, blue for U. paniculata, purple for both). Filled markers are literature defined locations (mentioned in the specific study). Open markers are general locations estimated by place names in the study text. In the interactive map (Supplemental Information 3), mentions can be seen within the pop-up label, as well as the corresponding species label (“A” or “U”), a location name (“Bald Head Beach”) and an active link via DOI or stable URL to primary source.
Figure 4Painter, VA temperature trends.
Observations and trends of increasing annual mean of the maximum temperature (A), annual mean of the minimum temperature (B), and winter (Dec 21–March 20) mean temperature (C) at Painter, VA, near the northern range limit of U. paniculata.
Figure 5GBIF data.
Map of A. breviligulata (orange) and U. paniculata (blue) occurrences from the GBIF database. The map background is OpenStreetMap data (https://www.openstreetmap.org).