Coastal and wetland ecosystems of the Chesapeake Bay watershed: Applying palynology to understand impacts of changing climate, sea level, and land use

Author(s):  
Debra A. Willard ◽  
Christopher E. Bernhardt ◽  
Cliff R. Hupp ◽  
Wayne N. Newell
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soely Luyando-Flusa ◽  
◽  
Christopher J. Hein ◽  
Leslie Reeder-Myers ◽  
Torben Rick ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Walsh ◽  
Charles Griffiths ◽  
Dennis Guignet ◽  
Heather Klemick

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-43
Author(s):  
Anushiya Jeganathan ◽  
Ramachandran Andimuthu ◽  
Palanivelu Kandasamy

Cities are dynamic systems resulting from the complex interaction of various socio-ecological and environmental developments. Climate change disproportionately affects cities mostly located in climate-sensitive areas; thus, these urban systems are the most critical in modern societies under changing climate scenarios, uncertain disruptions, and urban inhabitants' daily lives. It is essential to analyze the challenges in the metropolitan area through the lens of climate change. The present work analyses the challenges in Chennai, a coastal city in India and one of the chief industrial growth canters in Indian and South Asian region. The challenges are analyzed through the city’s system analysis via land use, green cover, population, and coastal hazards. Land use and green cover changes are studied through satellite images using ArcGIS and assessing coastal risks due to sea-level rise through GIS-based inundation model. There are drastic changes in land-use patterns; the green cover had reduced much, including agricultural and forest cover due to rapid urbanization. The land use has changed to 59.6% of the reduction in agriculture land, nearly 40% reduction in forest land, and 47% of the wetland over time. The observed mean sea level trend for Chennai is + 0.55 mm/year from 1916 to 2015 and the area of 21.75 sq. km is under the threat of inundation to 0.5m sea-level rise. The population growth, drastic changes in land use pattern, green cover reduction, and inundation due to sea-level rise increase the city's risks to climate change. There is a need to ensure that future land-use developments do not worsen the current climate risk level, either through influencing the hazards themselves or affecting the urban system's future vulnerability and adaptive capacity. The study also urges the zone level adaptation strategies to ensure the resilience of the city.


10.7249/pe243 ◽  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Berg ◽  
Debra Knopman ◽  
Benjamin Hobbs ◽  
Klaus Keller ◽  
Robert Nicholas

Author(s):  
Mark Scallion ◽  
Mark Scallion ◽  
Samantha Pitts ◽  
Samantha Pitts

Sea level rise caused by climate change is a significant threat to communities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Audubon, in conjunction with NNOCCI, has crafted a locally applicable methodology for successfully sharing climate messages with the public. If enough voices are trained in proven climate communication techniques, the discourse around climate change will change to be productive, creative and solutions focused. Climate communicators and scientists frequently encounter two pitfalls. The first is assuming people have any understanding of climate science. Although studies indicate many feel it is an important issue, many are largely misinformed about the causes and ramifications of climate change. The second is the tendency to talk about climate in the context of unproductive cultural models. A good example of this is graphically highlighting the dire situation that is faced by polar bears, humans or other species, which lead people to quickly disengage from the issue as “too big and scary to deal with.” Through the use of solid explanatory chains, good climate communicators can fill cognitive gaps and avoid unproductive cultural models. Skilled framers direct the conversation towards helpful cultural models and explain climate issues through step-by-step cause and effect and strategically deployed explanatory metaphors. Skilled framers start the conversation with solutions in mind.


Author(s):  
Scott J. Goetz ◽  
Claire A. Jantz ◽  
Stephen D. Prince ◽  
Andrew J. Smith ◽  
Dmitry Varlyguin ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Glenn E. Moglen ◽  
Kären C. Nelson ◽  
Margaret A. Palmer ◽  
James E. Pizzuto ◽  
Catriona E. Rogers ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Silvia Terziotti ◽  
Paul D. Capel ◽  
Anthony J. Tesoriero ◽  
Jessica A. Hopple ◽  
Scott C. Kronholm

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