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Climate Adaptation in the Delaware Estuary: Risks, Opportunities and Tough Choices Danielle Kreeger Partnership for the Delaware Estuary June 23, 2010 EPA Climate Ready Estuaries The CRE Program works with the National Estuary Programs and other coastal managers to: • Assess climate change vulnerabilities • Develop and implement adaptation strategies • Engage and educate stakeholders • Share lessons learned with other coastal managers DK 6/23/10 Climate Ready Approach Inventory Vulnerabilities and Adaptation Options Environmental Predictions DK 6/23/10 Estimate Future Status and Ecosystem Services Rank Vulnerabilities and Options Recommendations Sharing and Next Steps Environmental Predictions Temp Salinity Sea Level Rise Storms Example Effects on Example Resources Water Habitats Living Resources Work Groups Climate Adaptation Work Group (CAWG) Delaware Estuary Pilot STAC-affiliated; Chair: Najjar Vulnerability and Options Tidal Wetland Sub-group Future Status Shellfish Sub-group Velinsky & Kreeger Kreeger & Kraeuter Drinking Water Sub-group Rankings Connolly Predictions & Modeling Team Recommendations Najjar 2,000 1,800 1,600 1,400 Millions of 1,200 Liters 1,000 Processed 800 600 400 200 0 $ 1 2 4 6 8 Natural Capital Team Series1 10 Years After Planting 15 30 Cole DK 6/23/10 Temperature A2 B1 = Low Emissions A2 = High Emissions B1 A2 B1 oC B1 A2 Early Century Mid Century Late Century More warming in summer than winter Scenario differences minor until late century However, late century scenario differences very important for life Due to climate momentum, we must plan for warmer conditions May 13, 2010 Precipitation Annual Precipitation Change 25 More precipitation, especially in cooler seasons 20 15 Precipitation Change % Models are less in agreement for summer Annual 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 May 13, 2010 B1 11-30 A2 11-30 B1 46-65 A2 46-65 B1 80-99 A2 80-99 Sea Level Rise – Global (0.5 to 1 m) (AR4) (AR4) All GCMs, all scenarios (TAR) GCM average, all scenarios (TAR) TAR full range (with land ice uncertainty) Source: Church et al. (2008) Sea Level Rise – Local (0.5 to 1.5 m or more) Higher local rises expected due to: • Changing ocean currents • Sinking of the land • Other factors May 13, 2010 Source: Yin et al. (2009) Growing Season Length Growing Season 60 Days A2 50 40 30 A2 B1 B1 20 10 0 3 Mid Century 4 5 Late Century6 Opposite pattern for number of frost days May 13, 2010 Case Studies Delaware Estuary Pilot Vulnerability and Options Future Status Tidal Marshes Bivalve Shellfish Rankings Recommendations Drinking Water Tidal Wetlands – Why? A Signature Trait of System Near Contiguous Band Diverse: Freshwater Tidal Marshes Brackish Marshes Salt Marshes Nature’s Benefits Flood Protection Water Quality Fish and Wildlife Natural Areas Carbon Sequestration Tidal Wetlands Long-standing Concerns Degradation Conversion and Loss Growing Concerns Sea Level & Salinity Rise Storms Sediment budget Living Shorelines 2008 DK 6/23/10 Tidal Wetlands – Fair to Poor Condition Severely Stressed 35% Minimally or Not Stressed 17% Moderately Stressed 48% Slide from Chris Bason and Amy Jacobs Tidal Wetland Projections – PDE & IEc 2000 2100 • • • • Conversion of >40,000 ha Uplands to Tidal Wetlands Conversion of >100,000 ha Tidal Wetlands to Water Net Loss of 26% of Existing Tidal Wetlands Ecosystem Services Losses >> Acreage Losses DK 6/23/10 Tidal Wetlands – Vulnerabilities Top Climate Concerns • Sea Level Rise “Drowning” Wetlands • Can’t keep pace, no where to go • Interactions with nutrients, sediment deficits, etc. • Salinity Sea Level Rise Precip & Storms • Salinity Rise • • Biota intolerant of high salt Temperature Change Tidal Wetland Vulnerabilities Carbon Dioxide Precipitation and Storms Increase in intensity & frequency • Erosion risks • DK 6/23/10 Tidal Wetland Vulnerability Freshwater Tidal Marshes DK 6/23/10 • Salinity Rise • Barriers to Landward Migration • Others: Tidal Range, Seasonal Drying/Wetting Salt Marshes • • • • Sea Level Rise Storms and Wind Wave Erosion Barriers to Landward Migration Others: Seasonal Wetting/Drying, Invasives Tidal Wetlands – Adaptation Options • • • • • • Protection of Natural Buffers Structure Setbacks Living Shorelines Strategic Retreat Managing Water Flows (salinity) Managing Sediments Wetland Tough Choices • Where will they be converted to open water? • Where can we save them ? • Where is strategic retreat the best option? Needs Geospatial Approach • Regional Sediment Budget Linked to Tidal Wetland Ecosystem Model • LIDAR, Land Use, Modeling and Climate Monitoring Data • Assessment Methods to Prioritize Adaptation Tactics • DK 6/23/10 Next Generation Living Shorelines Soft Armoring With Natural Communities DK 6/23/10 Tidal Wetland - Recommendations Identify and protect suitable wetland migration areas Restore to slow erosion and marsh loss Develop indicators and track impairments from climate through monitoring Identify special protection or management areas – prioritize action Educate resource managers about the importance of wetlands and climate risks Titus and Wang, 2008 http://maps.risingsea.net/New_Jersey.html DK 6/23/10 Case Studies Delaware Estuary Pilot Vulnerability and Options Future Status Tidal Marshes Bivalve Shellfish Rankings Recommendations Drinking Water DK 6/23/10 Bivalves – Why? • Abundant Native Species - Headwaters to Ocean • Provide Many Benefits (Ecosystem Goods and Services) • Excellent Environmental Indicators • Current Populations are Below Carrying Capacity DK 6/23/10 11 Other Species of Freshwater Unionid Mussels Bivalves of the Delaware Corbicula fluminea Elliptio complanata Rangia cuneata Mya arenaria Geukensia demissa Mytilus edulis Ensis directus DRBC Crassostrea virginica Mercenaria mercenaria Nature’s Benefits Bivalve Shellfish are “Ecosystem Engineers” Mussel Beds DK 6/23/10 CTUIR Freshwater Mussel Project Oyster Reefs Kreeger Bivalves – Issues Rutgers HSRL Oyster Disease and Salinity Susan Ford, Rutgers HSRL www.livingclassrooms.org/lbo/dermo/oyster2.jpg Bivalve Projections – Oysters Can they be maintained until they might see better conditions? 1000 No Help With Help 1758 900 Longer Growing Season 800 Number per Bushel 700 600 2 Recruitment Events 500 400 Intertidal Niche Expansion? 300 200 100 Point of No Return Oyster Spat Mean Oyster Mean Spat Historical data from Rutgers Haskin Shellfish Laboratory 5 7 2060 Year 3 2030 53 55 57 59 61 63 65 67 69 71 73 75 77 79 81 83 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 1 Today 0 Bivalves – Issues Freshwater Mussels are Imperiled DK 6/23/10 Bivalve Projections – FW Mussels Shifting Species Ranges, But No Dispersal Patchy, Impaired Elliptio complanata Rare Extirpated Strophitus undulatus Alasmidonta heterodon State Conservation Status NJ Scientific Name Scientific Name ALASMIDONTA HETERODON DWARF WEDGEMUSSEL Endangered Endangered Critically Imperiled ALASMIDONTA UNDULATA TRIANGLE FLOATER Extirpated ? Threatened Vulnerable ALASMIDONTA VARICOSA BROOK FLOATER Endangered Endangered Imperiled ANODONTA IMPLICATA ALEWIFE FLOATER Extremely Rare no data Extirpated ? ELLIPTIO COMPLANATA EASTERN ELLIPTIO common common Secure LAMPSILIS CARIOSA YELLOW LAMPMUSSEL Endangered Threatened Vulnerable LAMPSILIS RADIATA EASTERN LAMPMUSSEL Endangered Threatened Imperiled LASMIGONA SUBVIRIDIS GREEN FLOATER no data Endangered Imperiled LEPTODEA OCHRACEA TIDEWATER MUCKET Endangered Threatened Extirpated ? LIGUMIA NASUTA EASTERN PONDMUSSEL Endangered Threatened Critically Imperiled MARGARITIFERA MARGARITIFERA EASTERN PEARLSHELL no data no data Imperiled PYGANODON CATARACTA EASTERN FLOATER no data no data Vulnerable STROPHITUS UNDULATUS SQUAWFOOT Extremely Rare Species of Concern Apparently Secure DE PA Bivalve Projections – Ribbed Mussels Losing Marsh Habitat Bivalves – Vulnerability Oyster Reefs DK 6/23/10 • Salinity Driven Disease Epizootics • Others: Food, pH? Salt marsh Mussel Beds • Loss and Degradation of Wetland Habitat • Others: Food, PH? Freshwater Mussel Beds • Range Shifts with No Dispersal • Habitat Degradation (T, storms, fish hosts) Shellfish Tough Decisions Which species and associated benefits can be sustained? Which should we invest in? (since funding will always be limited) DK 6/23/10 Bivalves – Adaptation Options DK 6/23/10 Oyster Shellplanting Propagate Mussels Living Shorelines Fish Passage for Mussels Riparian Restoration Bivalves – Adaptation Options Also…. • Flow Management • Water Quality Management • Monitoring & Research DK 6/23/10 Bivalves – Recommendations • Plant shell to sustain oyster populations. Shell planting successfully increases recruitment and sustains oysters. • Rebuild reefs and beds of other native species. Use hatcheries and relocation programs, along with habitat enhancements such as dam removals, riparian reforestation, and living shorelines. • Develop climate indicators that track bivalve populations. Climate studies are also needed. • Educate the resource management community regarding the effects of water quality and quantity on bivalves and the importance of bivalves for watershed health. A coordinated, watershed-based approach to bivalve restoration and climate adaptation is recommended due to positive feedbacks on system health and resilience. DK 6/23/10 Case Studies Delaware Estuary Pilot Vulnerability and Options Future Status Tidal Marshes Bivalve Shellfish Rankings Recommendations Drinking Water Climate Change +Other Changes DK 36 •Marcellus Shale •Ecological Flows •Spills, NRDA •Dredging Added Complexity •Withdrawals •Wind Farms •Land Use Change •Development •Emerging Pollutants DK 6/23/10 Delaware Estuary Climate Change • Not all changes to natural resources will be damaging, but there will be many more losers than winners • Need a Paradigm Shift: Restore for the future rather than for the past • Adaptation will require investment to protect lives and livelihoods. • Proactive investment today will also save money in the long term due to compounding of ecosystem services DK 6/23/10 Immediate Adaptation Actions text • • • • Protect buffers, plant shell, and drinking water infrastructure Climate monitoring plan – tidal wetlands & bivalve shellfish Hydrodynamic models – fill information gaps Geospatial framework – tidal wetland priority areas text • • • • Assess stream and shoreline conditions – priority restoration Educate management community about Estuary resources Identify special protection or management areas Consider policy changes needed to facilitate CC adaptation http://www.delawareestuary.org/science_projects_climate_ready_products.asp Delaware Estuary Pilot - End - Many Other Issues Timing of Shorebird Migration and Horseshoe Crab Spawning Website slides are from the Delaware Shorebird Project and the Horseshoe Crab Conservation Network Drinking Water – Why? • Drinking water for >16 million • Philadelphia – 1.4 million • New York City DK 6/23/10 Drinking Water – Concerns Quantity: 95% used for power generation and industry Anticipated population growth of 83% by 2100 Quality: Industrial discharges Stormwater runoff Agriculture runoff Abandoned mine runoff Marcellus Shale effluents Headwater forest and buffer losses DK 6/23/10 Drinking Water Vulnerabilities • Erosion of infrastructure • Obsolete Supply Systems DK 6/23/10 • In direct path of flooding, storm surges, and sea level rise Effects on Drinking Water Flooding / Storm Surge Precipitation Changes • Degraded source water quality • Salinity Intrusion Salinity Rise Drought • Power Outages • Customer Supply Issues Sea Level Rise Drinking Water Vulnerabilities Wild Fires / Lightening DK 6/23/10 Drinking Water Tough Questions • How can we maintain low salinity in the upper estuary? • Will more reservoirs be needed and where? • Where should infrastructure be protected? Drinking Water – Adaptation Options DK 6/23/10 • Infrastructure protection • Resilient Materials , Modern Upgrades • Minimize water demand • Water Efficiency, BMP’s • New treatment & distribution system • Able to with-stand inundation • Prevent increased stormwater runoff • Protect source water with forests and buffers • Disinfection of wastewater