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Tijuana River NERR, California [Credit: Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve] |
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NERRS Sites [Credit: NOAA] |
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Waquoit Bay NERR in Cape Cod, Mass. [Credit: NOAA] |
Key Findings
- Reserve ecological resilience was examined and the key underlying estuarine stressors were found to be toxic pollutants, storm impacts, invasive species, habitat fragmentation, sedimentation, and shoreline erosion. The most frequently identified factors contributing to these stressors included residential development, land use, population growth, wastewater treatment and sea level rise.
- High social sensitivity to climate change was indicated where there is higher employment within natural resource-dependent industries, lower per capita income and median home values, higher percentages of minority populations, and a higher percentage of individuals lacking a high school education. Social sensitivity to climate change was generally highest in the southern portions of the East and West coasts of the U.S., the Gulf of Mexico, and Alaska.
- Biophysical sensitivity summarizes each reserve's relationship between annual spring atmospheric temperature, rainfall data, and water quality factors such as water temperature, dissolved oxygen, and pH. Temperature change exposure risk was greatest for reserves located in the Great Lakes, Gulf of Mexico, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast regions of the country, while reserves in the Gulf of Mexico, parts of the Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, California, and Oregon showed the greatest risk of sea level rise exposure.
For further information, see http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/news/weeklynews/aug13/nerrs-climate-report.html
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [August 07, 2013]