@article{10.2307/41486664, ISSN = {15592723, 15592731}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/41486664}, abstract = {An integrated marsh management (IMM) project in an urbanized watershed on Long Island, New York, USA, aimed to mitigate salt marsh degradation and to reduce mosquito production by an innovative combination of restoration and open marsh water management methods. The grid ditch network at two treatment marshes was replaced with naturalized tidal channels and ponds. Effects of the hydrologie alterations were monitored utilizing a beforeafter-control-impact approach. The treatment marshes experienced a number of beneficial outcomes including a fourfold reduction in the invasive Phragmites australis and increased native vegetation cover in the most degraded portions of the marsh, increased abundance and diversity of marsh killifish and estuarine nekton species, higher shorebird and waterfowl densities, and increased avian species diversity. The successful implementation of IMM concept led to improved marsh health and diminished mosquito production. Therefore, this study may serve as a template for similar large-scale integrated salt marsh restoration projects.}, author = {Ilia Rochlin and Mary-Jane James-Pirri and Susan C. Adamowicz and Mary E. Dempsey and Thomas Iwanejko and Dominick V. Ninivaggi}, journal = {Estuaries and Coasts}, number = {3}, pages = {727--742}, publisher = {[Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation, Springer]}, title = {The Effects of Integrated Marsh Management (IMM) on Salt Marsh Vegetation, Nekton, and Birds}, volume = {35}, year = {2012} }