Salt pannes and pools
Salt pannes and pools are water retaining depressions located within salt and brackish marshes. Pools tend to retain water during the summer months between high tides, whereas pannes generally do not. Salt pannes generally start when a mat of organic debris is deposited upon existing vegetation, killing it. This creates a slight depression in the surrounding vegetation which retains water for varying periods of time. Upon successive cycles of inundation and evaporation the panne develops an increased salinity greater than that of the larger body of water. This increased salinity dictates the type of flora and fauna able to grow within the panne. Salt pools are also secondary formations, though the exact mechanism of formation are not well understood; some have predicted they will increase in size and abundance in the future due to rising sea levels.
Salt pannes and pools are unique microhabitats dominated by various species of halophytes, benthic plants and varying estuarine marine life that vary considerably in composition due to a variety of factors:
- Substrate type: affects the ability of the depression to hold water.
- Depth and diameter: affect water temperature and evaporation rate in the depression. A shallow and wide pool will evaporate at a greater rate than a pool of the same volume of water which is deeper and has a smaller surface area. Evaporation rate also affects salinity, the higher the evaporation rate the higher the salinity, with rates as high as a third greater than ocean water.
- Location within the intertidal zone, whether high marsh or low marsh and distance from the mean low tide mark which affects the length and duration of inundation until the depression is subject to evaporation as well as length of time until the rising tide replenishes the water volume.
Variants of salt pannes and pools:
Low salt marsh
- Low salt marsh panne
High salt marsh
- Arrow-grass panne
- Smooth cord-grass panne
Salt marsh mosquito panne
Minimal vegetation often found on the upper half of the high salt marsh. It is typically deeper than forb and smooth cord-grass pannes. Usually flooded by the higher of the two spring tides, retains water for 2–3 weeks later until drying out. The female eastern salt marsh mosquito lays eggs on the exposed surface. The eggs lay dormant until the next time the panne floods.
Widgeon grass - marsh minnow deepwater pool. Pools on the high salt marsh that are semi-permanently and permanently flooded. They are able to sustain populations of sheephead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus variegatus), mummichog and other species of small fish which may become trapped in the pools and benthic species of vegetation. Occasionally can be found at the upper edge of the low salt marsh.
Brackish water marsh
Brackish marsh panne variants occur in brackish marshes, one of the native dominant species is spike grass, some brackish marsh pannes are dominated by the narrow-leaved cattail an invasive exotic species.- Mixed graminoid - forb panne
- Sparsely vegetated panne