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1.
J Environ Manage ; 345: 118936, 2023 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37688956

ABSTRACT

Climate action planning continues to accelerate rapidly across the globe as communities seek to prepare to thrive in an uncertain future. Climate action planning is a particularly contentious and complex topic in the southern United States, however, because of significant economic reliance on industries that contribute substantially to greenhouse gas emissions, and due to a complicated relationship between industry and persistent racial and economic inequities that contribute to distrust between communities, businesses, and state governments. Within the last decade, research efforts have begun to evaluate approaches used to develop city, state, and national-level climate action plans, finding that planning efforts are often as diverse as the localities they represent. Climate action planning processes that evaluate the potential implications of climate action on greenhouse gas emissions and societal values are often driven by either qualitative stakeholder engagement or by the results of numerical models. While both approaches are valuable, they also have limitations that can result in climate action plans that are unrealistic or unimplementable. Limited research is available that assesses planning efforts that integrate multiple evaluation methodologies. In this study, we evaluate the strengths and limitations of integrating qualitative and quantitative climate action evaluation methodologies in a planning process grounded in structured decision making using Louisiana as a case study. This mixed method planning approach applied both quantitative numerical models and qualitative expert elicitation to evaluate potential implications of climate action for Louisiana. We found that integration of approaches through a transparent, structured, and objectives-orientated process allowed for robust analysis of potential climate actions while engendering process buy-in across diverse stakeholder interests. This process ultimately resulted in the unanimous adoption of Louisiana's climate action plan, characterized by a wholistic and implementable set of climate actions balanced against the values of Louisianians. The process outlined in this study represents a replicable approach for other climate action planning efforts.


Subject(s)
Greenhouse Gases , Louisiana , Climate , Commerce , Uncertainty
2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 152(4): 2456, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36319245

ABSTRACT

Infauna influence geoacoustic parameters in surficial marine sediments. To investigate these effects, an experiment was conducted in natural sand-silt sediment in the northern Gulf of Mexico. In situ acoustic measurements of sediment sound speed, attenuation, and shear speed were performed, and sediment cores were collected from the upper 20 cm of the seabed. Laboratory measurements of sound speed and attenuation in the cores were conducted, after which the core contents were analyzed for biological and physical properties. Since no model currently accounts for the effects of infauna, a deviation from model predictions is expected. To assess the extent of this, acoustic measurements were compared with the viscous grain shearing model from Buckingham [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 122, 1486 (2007); J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 148, 962 (2020)], for which depth-dependent profiles of sediment porosity and mean grain size measured from the cores were used as input parameters. Comparison of acoustic results with distributions of infauna, worm tubes, and shell hash suggests biogenic impacts on acoustic variability and model accuracy are important in surficial marine sediments. The presence of infauna and worm tubes were correlated with higher variability in both sound speed and attenuation and greater deviation from the model near the sediment-water interface.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Geologic Sediments , Sound , Viscosity , Porosity
3.
J Environ Manage ; 318: 115589, 2022 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35772270

ABSTRACT

Outcomes of landscape scale restoration and conservation can be maximized when planning is based upon quantitative and decision-relevant information. Existing tools to support data-driven planning are hindered by regionally inconsistent information and a need for advanced methods to analyze data of varying spatial resolution and coverage. We present a synthesis methodology for region-wide derived metrics to characterize natural resource value, ecosystem stress, and social vulnerability to inform implementation of conservation and restoration projects. Our three-part methodology was developed and tested for the Gulf of Mexico in support of the Southeast Conservation Blueprint that was created to advance the Southeast Conservation and Adaptation Strategy. The first step included integration of prioritized natural resource metrics alongside socio-ecological metrics to create a data layer of synthesized natural resource priority across the northern Gulf of Mexico. The second component was calculation of ecosystem stress indices based on ecologically relevant thresholds and a cumulative ecosystem stress layer, in addition to analyzing correlations between individual stressors and their relative importance. The final component was development of a social vulnerability (SoVI) index. Analysis of these metrics illustrate their ability to effectively capture variability at multiple scales in the Gulf of Mexico, including expected spatial correlation of stressors such as road density and non-point source pollution in populated areas and the dominance of sea-level rise as a future stressor along the coast. Significant composite components of social vulnerability for the northern Gulf of Mexico region were identified and include economic status, professional workforce, elderly population, population stability, migrant workforce, and rural population. To demonstrate the utility of the data synthesis approach, we used the developed data layers to evaluate proposed marsh creation projects in southern Louisiana. The synthesized data layers were capable of distinguishing differences at the scale of individual habitat restoration projects, and high-value projects could be aligned with the goals of key funding streams. This pilot application illustrates how restoration programs could use the methodology developed here to maximize benefits from conservation and restoration actions along the northern Gulf of Mexico or other regions globally.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Wetlands , Aged , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Gulf of Mexico , Humans , Natural Resources
4.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 147(2): 812, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32113278

ABSTRACT

The activities of infaunal organisms, including feeding, locomotion, and home building, alter sediment physical properties including grain size and sorting, porosity, bulk density, permeability, packing, tortuosity, and consolidation behavior. These activities are also known to affect the acoustic properties of marine sediments, although previous studies have demonstrated complicated relationships between infaunal activities and geoacoustic properties. To avoid difficulties associated with real animals, whose exact locations and activities are unknown, this work uses artificial burrows and simulates infaunal activities such as irrigation, compaction, and tube building in controlled laboratory experiments. The results show statistically significant changes in sound speed and attenuation over a frequency range of 100-400 kHz, corresponding to wavelengths on the order of the burrow diameter. The greatest effects were observed for tubes constructed of hard shells which increased the attenuation by ∼30 dB m-1 across the measurement band. These results highlight the importance of biogenic hard structures such as tubes on sound attenuation and suggest that organisms that create hard structures may be good targets for acoustic mapping of infaunal abundance and distribution.

5.
PLoS One ; 14(2): e0212448, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30768634

ABSTRACT

In Florida, resource use patterns by Armases cinereum (Armases), a highly abundant crab in coastal habitats, may serve as important indicators of habitat condition. Here we investigated feeding patterns of Armases in coastal palm scrub forest to intertidal mangrove forest transition zones (transitions) as well as the relationship between habitat disturbance and Armases' trophic position across three pairs of geographically separated populations in Tampa FL, USA. Each pair of sites represented an unmodified "natural" location as well as a "disturbed" location lacking upland terrestrial palm scrub forested habitat. Laboratory experiments established a baseline understanding of feeding preference of Armases offered strictly mangrove material as well as sources abundant at the transition. In-situ feeding behavior was examined using MixSIAR mixing models with δ13C and δ15N stable isotope tracers. Armases showed a strong preference for consuming partially-decomposed mangrove material from Avicennia germinans and an equally strong preference for Iva frutescens. Armases also displayed predatory behavior under laboratory conditions, confirming omnivory in the presence of mangrove material. Stable isotopes revealed a pattern of elevated trophic position of Armases in disturbed habitats over paired natural locations. Diet reconstruction provided coarse resolution of in-situ feeding and results show high spatial variation: in natural habitats, Armases appears to rely heavily upon upland plant material compared to disturbed habitats where it may consume more animal prey. Combined, these findings support that Armases trophic position and diet may indicate habitat quality in mangrove transitions in the southeastern United States.


Subject(s)
Brachyura/physiology , Ecosystem , Wetlands , Animals , Avicennia , Diet , Feeding Behavior , Florida , Food Chain , Humans , Models, Biological
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