Does tidal marsh restoration lead to the recovery of trophic pathways that support estuarine fishes?
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Evaluation of tidal marsh restoration success is typically based on the recovery of habitat acreage and target species. However, food-web structure may provide valuable insight into ecosystem functioning trajectories. Here, we studied restored tidal marshes of different ages (new, young, old; spanning 1 to 150 years) in comparison to nearby reference sites along the San Francisco Estuary. We asked: (i) How does restoration help recover energy pathways that support fish? (ii) Do fishes rely more on algal vs. detrital pathways in restored sites?; and (iii) How does food-web structure vary as a function of species origin and life history? To answer these questions, we sampled fish (n=806) and basal resources (emergent vegetation and phytoplankton; n=109) seasonally over two hydrologically contrasting years. Using stable isotopes (ð¿13C, ð¿15N, and ð¿34S), we calculated fish isotopic niche volumes, food chain lengths, and the relative importance of algal vs. detrital energy pathways...., Using the stable isotopes carbon (δ13C), nitrogen (δ15N), and sulfur (δ34S), we characterize and compare food webs at six sites (three reference, three restored) spanning the low salinity zone of the San Francisco Bay-Delta: upstream of the Carquinez Strait and downstream of the SacramentoâSan Joaquin confluence. These sites represent a range of restoration ages (2-50+ years since breaching) and include Tule Red Island (breached in October 2019) and Chipps Island (slated for interior restoration). We reconstruct food webs by calculating food chain length, isotopic niche volume, and energy pathways based on isotopic signatures of basal resources (e.g., phytoplankton, emergent vegetation) and fish. All field data were collected in Winter and Summer 2020 and 2021., , # Does tidal marsh restoration lead to the recovery of trophic pathways that support estuarine fishes?
Dataset Version and Release History
\* Current Version: 2
\* Number: 1.1.0
\* Date: 2025-08-12
\* Persistent identifier: n/a
\* Summary of changes: n/a
\* Dataset Title: Data for the article \"Does tidal marsh restoration lead to the recovery of trophic pathways that support estuarine fishes?\"
\* Dataset Contributors:
\* Creators: Megan D. Pagliaro, Susan E.W. De La Cruz, Isa Woo, Jake Sousa, Natalie Rich,\
Lenny Grimaldo, Denise Colombano, and Albert Ruhi
\* Date of Issue: n/a
\* Publisher: n/a
\* License: Use of these data is covered by the following license:
\* Title: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0)
\* Specification: [https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/](https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/); the authors respectfully request to be contacted by researchers interested in the re-use of these data so that the possibility of collaboration can be discussed...,
创建时间:
2025-08-15



