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Estuarine vegetated wetland change scenarios for estuaries in the conterminous United States, 1996–2019

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
1996
End Date
2016

Citation

Han, M., Enwright, N.M., Osland, M.J., Thorne, K.M., Guntenspergen, G.R., Grace, J.B., Steyer, G.D., Herold, N., and Chivoiu, B., 2023, Estuarine vegetated wetland change scenarios for estuaries in the conterminous United States, 1996–2019: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9U43QEO.

Summary

This data release contains land cover-derived statistics regarding estuarine vegetated wetland area change within estuary drainage areas along the conterminous U.S. This dataset includes net change in estuarine vegetated wetland area based on National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Coastal Change Assessment Program (C-CAP) 1996 and 2016 land cover data. Net change was assessed between estuarine vegetated wetlands (i.e., estuarine marshes, mangroves, non-mangrove estuarine woody wetlands, and salt pannes, depending on vegetation coverage and type) and the following other landcover classes: 1) water; 2) unconsolidated shore; 3) freshwater woody wetlands; 4) freshwater marsh; 5) upland; and 6) agriculture. An estuarine [...]

Contacts

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conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.cpg 5 Bytes text/plain
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.dbf 147.69 KB text/plain
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.prj 459 Bytes text/plain
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.sbn 1.79 KB x-gis/x-shapefile
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.sbx 244 Bytes x-gis/x-shapefile
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.shp 3.77 MB x-gis/x-shapefile
conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.shx 1.41 KB x-gis/x-shapefile
Extension: conus_EVWchange_byEstuary.zip

Purpose

Coastal wetlands provide numerous ecosystem goods and services, including supporting important fish and wildlife habitat, improving water quality, storing carbon, protecting coastlines and coastal communities, and providing recreational opportunities. Over the coming century, climate change and sea-level rise will cause widespread change to coastal wetlands, potentially leading to wetland collapse. Estuarine vegetated wetlands can adapt to sea-level rise through both vertical development (i.e., biophysical feedbacks and sedimentation) and upslope/horizontal migration. Natural resource managers will be interested in quantifying changes to estuarine vegetated wetlands over time to help inform current and future decisions regarding land management and resource stewardship. The goal of this proposed framework was to provide a simple set of metrics that can be used to understand the trajectory of estuarine vegetated wetlands over time. Repeated observations of these change metrics over time will provide important insights into critical thresholds for coastal wetland adaptive capacity. For example, this information can highlight where change could be resisted (e.g., restoration actions to avoid wetland loss, sediment addition), accepted (i.e., accepting upslope migration or localized wetland loss), or how and where change could be directed (e.g. tidal restoration of impounded wetlands or enhancing migration corridor connectivity).

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9U43QEO

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