Abstract

AbstractSalt is a key solute in salt marshes and under the influence of evapotranspiration can accumulate to a high concentration level in the marsh soil and precipitate in the solid form to become a significant stressor for plants, affecting marsh plant productivity and ecological zonation. Numerical simulations of coupled pore water flow and salt transport were conducted to examine how spring‐neap tides and evaporation combine to influence salt dynamics and distribution patterns in marshes. The salt pan formation was simulated with a sandy loam marsh soil subjected to a medium rate of potential evaporation. The critical condition for the salt pan formation was underpinned by hydraulic connection between the marsh surface and water table to sustain evaporation in the supratidal zone. Both low soil permeability and overly high potential evaporation were found to break the hydraulic connection. In this case, the surface soil salinity increased gradually over the intertidal zone to a maximum around the spring high tide mark followed by a rapid decrease to a lower constant level across the supratidal zone. This salinity distribution pattern has also been observed in the field. In both salt marshes with and without salt pans, excessive salt accumulated on the marsh surface due to evaporation was removed by tidally induced circulating flow and/or flow driven by density gradients associated with the accumulated salt. The salt dynamics and distribution patterns revealed here, especially the salt pan formation simulated for the first time, have important implications for studies of marsh plant growth and overall eco‐functions.

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