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Understanding the Impacts of Ecological Drought on Estuaries in the Pacific Northwest

Understanding ecological drought impacts on Pacific Northwest estuaries
Principal Investigator
Karen Thorne

Dates

Start Date
2016-06-18
End Date
2018-06-18
Release Date
2016

Summary

In the Pacific Northwest, coastal ecosystems are highly productive areas that support millions of migratory waterbirds, shellfish, salmon and related fish. These species depend on food and habitats provided by estuaries (coastal tidal areas where streams and rivers flow into the ocean) for successful migration and breeding. Climate change effects such as drought, sea-level rise, and changing freshwater flow, precipitation, and temperatures will alter these important habitats. This study examined how changing ocean and freshwater patterns and conditions will influence estuary habitats. The main goal was to provide scientific support for future planning efforts and conservation of natural resources found in coastal ecosystems. The project [...]

Child Items (3)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Karen Thorne
Funding Agency :
Northwest CSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

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Pacific NW.JPG
“Pacific NW marsh - Credit: USGS”
thumbnail 2.68 MB image/jpeg
Willapa.JPG
“Willapa Bay - Credit: USGS”
thumbnail 2.64 MB image/jpeg

Purpose

In the Pacific Northwest, coastal ecosystems are highly productive areas that support millions of migratory waterbirds, shellfish, and salmonids. These species depend on food and habitats provided by estuaries for successful migration and breeding. Climate change effects such as drought, sea-level rise, changing freshwater flow, local precipitation, and temperatures will alter these important habitats. Our study examines how changing ocean and hydrologic conditions will influence estuary habitats to inform resource management. Our goal is to provide scientific support for future planning and conservation of natural resources of coastal ecosystems as our climate changes.

Project Extension

parts
typeTechnical Summary
valueEstuarine ecosystems located at the interface between land and sea contains complex processes and food webs that include migratory and resident species managed by state and federal agencies. The sustainability of estuarine ecosystems relies heavily on local water delivery, suspended sediment availability, primary productivity, and relative sea-level rise. Changing ocean and atmospheric conditions are likely to reshape these ecosystems and species that rely on them. Efforts to project ecosystem change along the Pacific coast due to ecological drought and sea-level rise have largely relied on regional scale data which is not representative of local estuaries and at the scale of management decision. We propose a process-based approach to integrate data from multiple disciplines into empirical models describing current and future conditions and associated habitat changes with ecological drought and sea-level rise. This approach is transferable across coastal Climate Science Centers (CSCs) and Landscape Conservation Cooperatives (LCCs). Specifically, we propose three overarching objectives: (1) Hold in-person meetings with resource managers to identify key ecological drought-sea-level rise management concerns for their estuaries, (2) Leverage and analyze long-term existing datasets of river levels and discharge rates, as well as available water quality data, to determine how drought has affected these abiotic factors historically and currently, and (3) Use data on biotic communities as they relate to drought-sensitive abiotic drivers (e.g., salinity, water temperature, nutrients, sediment), to help inform key management questions identified by resource managers within each estuary (salmonids, vegetation, etc.). This synthesis will occur while working closely with local natural resource manager with in-person meetings to ensure the co-production of the results.
projectStatusCompleted

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC 8598cfe0-2000-42b2-9d11-b6fc990111fa
StampID NCCWSC NW16-DN0705

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