The Delaware National Estuarine Research Reserve (DNERR), one of 28 National Estuarine Research Reserves in the U.S., aims to establish, protect, and manage natural estuarine habitats for research, education, and coastal stewardship. The reserve consists of freshwater wetlands, ponds, forest lands in Blackbird Creek; and salt marsh and open water habitats on the St. Jones River on Delaware Bay. Climate change will have impacts of varying degrees on the DNERR’s natural resources and infrastructure. Changes in temperature will affect seasonal duration and intensity of precipitation, extreme storm events, and available moisture. Climate change is forecast to negatively affect the reserve through sea level rise and increasing incidence and intensity of damaging storms. These negative feedbacks will influence DNERR, Delaware Fish and Wildlife lands, and locally contiguous land uses, ecosystems, wildlife, and infrastructure in ways, difficult to predict.
Working with DNERR and the Delaware Coastal Management Program, Biohabitats crafted a Climate Change Adaptation Plan to help plan for and provide guidance related to impending changes to the reserve lands and the ecosystems in which they are located. This plan is needed to address very real threats that climate change is posing and will increasingly present in the future. A guidance document to address climate change resiliency and adaptive management for the Reserve in the context of its ecosystem setting and associated land uses, the plan helps DNERR continue to fulfill its mission of estuarine resource conservation and applied research.
TAGS
Owner: Delaware National Estuarine Research Reserve
Bioregion: Chesapeake/Delaware Bays
Physiographic province: Coastal Plain
Watershed: Delaware Bay