Abstract
Nearshore environments are nurseries for estuarine nekton and are preferentially sought out within an estuary. Habitat is the template on which population and community dynamics occur, and many linkages between habitat and nekton production are being altered by development. Thus, we are studying this linkage (function) while it is changing. We reviewed the literature on habitat alteration in nearshore environments, focusing on small-scale changes and their cumulative impacts. On a small scale, bulkheads and levees eliminate or significantly reduce access to intertidal marsh habitat, but these can accumulate to a larger area of impact, fragmenting habitat and reducing connectivity. Cumulative impacts are problematic because they are not immediately noted and build up over time to produce a more substantial impact. The creation of habitat patchiness (non-continuous segments) caused by development has received little attention but contributes to reduced environmental sustainability. Direct or indirect modification of landscapes influence access to nursery habitat for nekton and can reduce growth, increase mortality, and modify settlement and post-settlement habitat use patterns. Policymakers must make cumulative impacts an important item in their coastal management strategy, as there is growing evidence that created wetlands do not function like natural ones even after several decades.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank J. Shaw and C. Schloss of the Gunter Library at the Gulf Coast Research Laboratory for help locating many papers. Special thanks to S. Howell, St. John's Water Management District, Palatka, Florida, for help extending our Web of Science search dates. Special thanks to N. J. Brown-Peterson for critical review of an earlier draft of this paper and two external reviewers who helped focus the review.