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Extremes to Ex-Streams: Informing Ecological Drought Adaptation in the Northwest

Extremes to Ex-Streams: Ecological Drought Adaptation Synthesis Project
Principal Investigator
Rachel Gregg

Dates

Start Date
2017-08-15
End Date
2019-06-30
Release Date
2017

Summary

In the Northwest U.S., warming temperatures and changing precipitation patterns will likely result in significantly altered snowpack, stream flows, and water availability. Along with these changes comes an increased risk of “ecological drought”, or periods of water stress that impact ecosystems and the services they provide –which can ultimately impact human communities. More frequent and severe ecological droughts have the potential to push ecosystems beyond their ability to recover, resulting in complete changes in ecosystem composition and function. Ecological drought will only worsen existing management challenges, such as competition for water resources, habitat degradation, invasive species, and more frequent and severe wildfires. [...]

Child Items (3)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Rachel Gregg, Jessi Kershner
Funding Agency :
Northwest CSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

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ColumbiaRiver_AlanCressler.jpg
“Columbia River - Credit: Alan Cressler”
thumbnail 247.23 KB image/jpeg

Project Extension

parts
typeTechnical Summary
valueClimate change will increase the risk of ecological drought with projected changes likely to result in cascading impacts on species, habitats, and ecosystem services, including tree mortality, increases in wildfires, and altered water and nutrient cycling processes. These impacts will exacerbate current resource management challenges such as conflicts over water resources, land use and degradation, invasive species, maintaining agricultural yields, and managing wildfires. We propose to evaluate and synthesize the scientific body of research on ecological drought adaptation actions available to and in use by resource managers in the Northwest (i.e. Washington, Oregon, Idaho, western Montana). Products will include a state-of-the-science synthesis report on ecological drought climate adaptation actions and a management-focused fact sheet on effective ecological drought adaptation actions for the Northwest region. Knowing which adaptation actions can be best implemented at different scales and in various ecosystems will help resource managers to identify and leverage funding opportunities, create new or enhance existing partnerships, and communicate and coordinate with other agencies and organizations to prioritize on-the-ground ecological drought responses. Primary users of the results and products include scientists, resource managers, and policy makers responsible for responding to the challenges presented by ecological drought. This proposed project directly supports the need of the Northwest Climate Science Center to provide scientific research and synthesis to support natural resource management in a changing climate.
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2017
totalFunds66808.0
parts
typeAward Type
valueCooperative Agreement
typeAward Number
valueG17AC00376
totalFunds66808.0

Columbia River - Credit: Alan Cressler
Columbia River - Credit: Alan Cressler

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC f9633e00-a7c9-427a-9a10-10dd31135ba5
StampID NCCWSC NW17-GR1250

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