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Featured researches published by T. Cox.


Hydrobiologia | 2007

Tuning the tide: creating ecological conditions for tidal marsh development in a flood control area

T. Maris; T. Cox; Stijn Temmerman; P. De Vleeschauwer; S. Van Damme; T. De Mulder; E. Van den Bergh; Patrick Meire

The Schelde estuary, characterised as a turbid, polluted and eutrophic system, has nowadays reached a turning point in the restoration of its water quality. During the past century, human activities have reduced the intertidal areas, essential in the estuarine ecosystem for nutrient cycling and the self-cleaning capacity. Today, in combination with a master plan to protect the population from storm surges, an opportunity rises to restore areas with a tidal influence. One specific option of combining safety and ecology is the creation of flood control areas (FCA) under the influence of a controlled reduced tide (CRT). These specific areas will differ in many ways from fully tidal areas. However, these areas can fulfill important ecological functions with effects on aeration, nitrification, denitrification, sedimentation and primary production in the estuary. Opportunities for ecological development within a CRT have been investigated for a specific case. The ecology within a CRT showed to be very case specific, depending e.g. on the morphology of the area, the sluice design and the local water quality. Depending on the sluice design, water quality can be improved and sedimentation can be influenced. Possible measures to design a CRT with a rich habitat variation are discussed.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2015

Cold-water coral reefs and adjacent sponge grounds: hotspots of benthic respiration and organic carbon cycling in the deep sea

Cécile Cathalot; Dick van Oevelen; T. Cox; Tina Kutti; Marc S. S. Lavaleye; G.C.A. Duineveld; Filip J. R. Meysman

Cold-water coral reefs and adjacent sponge grounds are distributed widely in the deep ocean, where only a small fraction of the surface productivity reaches the seafloor as detritus. It remains elusive how these hotspots of biodiversity can thrive in such a food-limited environment, as data on energy flow and organic carbon utilization are critically lacking. Here we report in situ community respiration rates for cold-water coral and sponge ecosystems obtained by the non-invasive aquatic Eddy Correlation technique. Oxygen uptake rates over coral reefs and adjacent sponge grounds in the Traena Coral Field (Norway) were 9-20 times higher than those of the surrounding soft sediments. These high respiration rates indicate strong organic matter consumption, and hence suggest a local focusing onto these ecosystems of the downward flux of organic matter that is exported from the surface ocean. Overall, our results show that coral reefs and adjacent sponge grounds are hotspots of carbon processing in the food-limited deep ocean, and that these deep-sea ecosystems play a more prominent role in marine biogeochemical cycles than previously recognized.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Estuaries as filters: the role of tidal marshes in trace metal removal.

Johannes Teuchies; Wouter Vandenbruwaene; Roos Carpentier; Lieven Bervoets; Stijn Temmerman; Chen Wang; T. Maris; T. Cox; Alexander Van Braeckel; Patrick Meire

Flux calculations demonstrate that many estuaries are natural filters for trace metals. Yet, the underlying processes are poorly investigated. In the present study, it was hypothesized that intertidal marshes contribute significantly to the contaminant filter function of estuaries. Trace metal concentrations and sediment characteristics were measured along a transect from the subtidal, over an intertidal flat and marsh to a restored marsh with controlled reduced tide. Metal concentrations in the intertidal and restored marsh were found to be a factor two to five higher than values in the subtidal and intertidal flat sediments. High metal concentrations and high accretion rates indicate a high metal accumulation capacity of the intertidal marshes. Overbank sedimentation in the tidal marshes of the entire estuary was calculated to remove 25% to 50% of the riverine metal influx, even though marshes comprise less than 8% of the total surface of the estuary. In addition, the large-scale implementation of planned tidal marsh restoration projects was estimated to almost double the trace metal storage capacity of the present natural tidal marshes in the estuary.


Aquatic Botany | 2004

Modeling growth and carbon allocation in two reed beds (Phragmites australis) in the Scheldt estuary

Karline Soetaert; Maurice Hoffmann; Patrick Meire; Mathieu Starink; Dick van Oevelen; Sabine Van Regenmortel; T. Cox


Ecological Engineering | 2006

Flood control areas as an opportunity to restore estuarine habitat

T. Cox; T. Maris; Pieter De Vleeschauwer; Tom De Mulder; Karline Soetaert; Patrick Meire


Geomorphology | 2011

Sedimentation and response to sea-level rise of a restored marsh with reduced tidal exchange: Comparison with a natural tidal marsh

Wouter Vandenbruwaene; T. Maris; T. Cox; Donald R. Cahoon; Patrick Meire; Stijn Temmerman


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2009

Restoration of tidal freshwater vegetation using controlled reduced tide (CRT) along the Schelde Estuary (Belgium)

Sander Jacobs; Olivier Beauchard; Eric Struyf; T. Cox; T. Maris; Patrick Meire


Biogeosciences | 2009

A macro-tidal freshwater ecosystem recovering from hypereutrophication: the Schelde case study

T. Cox; T. Maris; Karline Soetaert; Daniel J. Conley; S. Van Damme; Patrick Meire; Jack J. Middelburg; Matthijs Vos; Eric Struyf


Ecological Engineering | 2011

A new technique for tidal habitat restoration: evaluation of its hydrological potentials

Olivier Beauchard; Sander Jacobs; T. Cox; T. Maris; Dirk Vrebos; Alexander Van Braeckel; Patrick Meire


Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2011

The effect of waste water treatment on river metal concentrations: removal or enrichment?

Johannes Teuchies; Lieven Bervoets; T. Cox; Patrick Meire; Eric de Deckere

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T. Maris

University of Antwerp

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Sander Jacobs

Research Institute for Nature and Forest

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Alexander Van Braeckel

Research Institute for Nature and Forest

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J Maes

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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