Sea-level rise projections for and observational data of tidal marshes along the California coast
Description
The overarching goal of this research was to use site-specific data to develop local and regionally-applicable climate change models that inform management of tidal wetlands along the Pacific Northwest coast. The overarching questions were: (1) how do tidal marsh site characteristics vary across estuaries, and (2) does tidal marsh susceptibility to sea-level rise (SLR) vary along a latitudinal gradient and between estuaries? These questions are addressed in this data collection with three specific objectives: (1) measure topographical and ecological characteristics (e.g., elevation, tidal range, vegetation composition) for tidal marsh and intertidal mudflats, (2) model SLR vulnerability of these habitats, and (3) examine spatial variability of these projected changes along the latitudinal gradient of the California coast.
Resources
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http://doi.org/10.5066/F7RX99V3 |
Tags
- dynamical
- morro-bay
- assessment
- tidal
- sf-bay-delta
- csc
- federal
- drought
- downscale
- geomorphology
- plants
- ca
- birds
- fire-and-extreme-weather
- sf-bay
- education
- water-and-ice
- gcm
- san-pablo-bay
- dem
- conservation
- humboldt-bay
- coastal
- marsh
- animals
- multiple
- vulnerability
- modeling-and-tools
- coastal-habitats
- vegetation
- california
- newport-bay
- pt-mugu
- sediment
- sea-level-rise
- extreme-weather
- model
- intertidal
- slr
- 2012
- climate-change
- gis
- nearshore
- sea-level-rise-and-coasts
- climate-and-ecosystem-modeling
- storm
- hydrology
- shoals
- management
- tijuana-river
- bolinas-lagoon
- southwest-csc
- wrf