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South Bay Salt Pond Restoration-- The Chance of a Lifetime!. Topics Covered in this Talk. Charge of the Science Team What is Restoration? Past and Current Habitats Major Ecological Communities The Science Strategy Some Key Questions Developing Our Knowledge Base.
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Topics Covered in this Talk • Charge of the Science Team • What is Restoration? • Past and Current Habitats • Major Ecological Communities • The Science Strategy • Some Key Questions • Developing Our Knowledge Base
Charge of the Science Team • Provide scientific direction for restoration planning, implementation and monitoring • Bring science into all phases of the process and to all involved parties • Develop a science strategy and conceptual models to guide the restoration of South Bay ecosystems • Identify critical data needs • Identify uncertainties • Help guide consultant activities and review products
Having a Science Team… • Is unique and proactive. • Will help to assure that science is included at every phase of the project. • Is essential for a successful program.
Interdisciplinary Practice of Environmental Restoration Jackson, et al. (1995): Ecological restoration is the process of repairing damage caused by humans to the diversity and dynamics of indigenous ecosystems. • Science • Technology • Regulation/Policy • Economics • Public Interaction
Restoration as Project and as Experiment Planning = Hypothesis Implementation = Run the experiment Monitoring = Collect/analyze data
Adaptive Management • Using data collected during monitoring to improve restoration projects • Apply to the current project to better achieve restoration goals • Use to improve the design of future projects
Restore to What? What is the Goal? • Native, indigenous ecosystem as a goal • Improving ecological functioning as a goal • Historical view helps guide restoration goals • Current conditions guide restoration goals
Oakland Harbor Carquinez Straights Our Urbanized Estuary
What are Tidal Salt Marshes? • Inundated by tides twice a day • Have water-logged, anaerobic soils • Dominated by wetland, halophilic plant species: • Cordgrass (Spartina foliosa) • Pickleweed (Salicornia virginica)
Mature Plant Community Zonation • Low marsh: cordgrass • Mid-marsh: pickleweed • High marsh: saltgrass (Distichlis spicata), alkali heath (Frankenia salina), Gumplant (Grindellia humilis) • Upland transition: saltgrass, alkali heath, coyote bush (Baccharis pilularis), Atriplex spp.
regularly inundated high accretion rates rarely inundated low accretion rates high marsh - upland transition Salicornia virginica Frankenia salina Distichlis spicata mid-marsh plain Salicornia virginica low marsh Spartina foliosa Tidal Marsh Zonation
Ecological Succession:Ecosystem Development • A salt marsh is formed when an area goes from a disturbed or former salt marsh site from to the mature community • Natural restoration is called ecological succession—the process we want to mimic • Salt marsh successional phases: • Open water • Mudflat • Vegetated mudflat
Tidal Salt Marsh Restoration Begins with Open Water… … and the tides bringing in sediment, organisms and seeds.
Next, Mudflats form… …stabilizing at an equilibrium point.
But, This is Not the End of the Process.As the marsh matures… • Nutrients build up • Species composition changes • A mosaic of habitat types develops
Marsh Restoration Takes Time • Time to reach marsh plain ~5-20 yrs • Time for dominant plants ~10-35 yrs • Maximum nutrient loads and full ecosystem functioning ~50-100 yrs
This Program will Take Time • Projects will be implemented in phases • Collect data on progress • Apply to next phases • Collect funding for phases • Natural processes take time
Salt Ponds as a Major South Bay Wetland Habitat • Historically, existed in low acreage • Extensively developed from late 1800s to 1940s • Are wetland habitats with their own ecology
What causes those colors?It’s the microorganisms! • Low to mid-salinity: Green algae dominate • Salinities increase: The algae, Dunaliella, lends a lighter green color • Mid- to High Salinity: Dunaliella produces a red pigment • Very High Salinities: Brine shrimp (Artemia franciscana) provide orange colors and Stichococcus (a bacteria) adds red hues
Avian Biodiversity and Abundance • 34 shorebird species—1 million birds • 35 waterfowl species—250,000 birds • At least 36 species of “other birds” closely associated with San Francisco Bay habitats • At least 9 state- and federally-listed threatened or endangered species
Bird Species: Continental Population Trends • In General: Wetland-dependent bird populations are far below historic levels. • Shorebirds: 16 of 47 U.S. species declined over the last 25 years • Waterfowl: Steep declines in some species, such as pintail and canvasbacks
One thing is clear…we cannot go back to the 1800s • Must consider importance of habitat changes • Salt ponds provide habitat • Urban conversion is difficult to reverse • Must consider existing adjacent land uses • Impacts on the restoration (pollutant runoff) • Restoration impacts on the adjacent land (flood prevention)
What is a Science Strategy? • Provides a scientific framework • Conceptual Models—landscape and pond-level • Key Questions and Data Needs • Modeling Needs • Provides scientific input at all stages of the planning process
Why is this project so complex? • Adjacent land uses • Flood protection • Agency requirements • Pond subsidence • Water quality • Species diversity protection • Sedimentation rates and patterns
Some Key Questions • To what extent is the suspended sediment supply adequate for restoration? • Can we prevent non-native, invasive species from dominating restored marshes? • To what extent might restoration activities release contaminants? What are the ecological effects of released contaminants? • What effects will South Bay restoration have on large-scale ecological features and processes?
More Key Questions • How will the conversion of salt ponds to salt ponds and other habitats affect shorebird and waterfowl numbers? • Can remaining ponds be managed to increase their shorebird and waterfowl carrying capacity? • What are the predictions for sea-level rise and how will that affect restored South Bay marshes?
Developing a Common Base of Understanding • Science Team and other experts meet with Work Groups to share ideas • Opportunities for public involvement in research, monitoring and data collection • Stakeholders give input to the Science Team
How might this project effect you? • Flood protection is a central goal • Public access is also a project issue • Changes in species communities • Healthier South Bay ecosystem • Improved water quality
Next Science Team Presentation: • Restoration Constraints • Scientific Uncertainties • Complicating Factors