Science In The Cape Cod National Seashore

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Science in the National Seashore State of Wellfleet Harbor Conference November 15, 2008

Transcript of Science In The Cape Cod National Seashore

Page 1: Science In The Cape Cod National Seashore

Science in the National Seashore

State of Wellfleet Harbor ConferenceNovember 15, 2008

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National Park Service Mission:

“…..conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and

the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the

same in such manner and by such means as will leave them

unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”

Preserve and Protect Natural and Cultural Resources

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Preserving and Protecting Natural Resources:

Responding to forces of change (Management) -Recognizing sources of change - avoiding/minimizing impacts -Repairing damage -Addressing legacy conditions

Understanding natural resources (Science) -Inventory -Monitoring -Research

Integrating science and management -Adaptive management

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Science:

-Inventory: snap shot - distribution / abundance of resources - resources in areas of specific interest

-Monitoring: trends over time - key parameters over the long term : "vital signs" - system /species response

-Research: why and how - hypothesis testing - assessment, causation - prediction, modeling - mechanisms of response

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plant and animal groups: amphibians and reptiles small and meso-mammals breeding birds migratory shorebirds and waterfowl freshwater fish estuarine nekton plant assemblage maps SAV distribution

Inventory

species of special concern: non-native invasive plants golden club broom crowberry water willow stem borer New England cottontails

system features / habitats: heathlands vernal wetlands surface elevations intertidal sediments

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estuaries/salt marshes: tidal hydrology estuarine water quality nutrient enrichment * salt marsh vegetation* sediment elevation* nekton* beaches / spits / barrier islands: geomorphic change* inlet dynamics nesting shorebirds

Monitoring

*Long-term Coastal Ecosystem Monitoring Program

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ponds and freshwater wetlands: kettle pond water quality* pond vegetation* vernal pond vegetation* purple loosestrife amphibians*

coastal uplands: dune grassland vegetation* heathland vegetation* forest vegetation* cultural landscape restoration response non-native invasive plants broom crowberry mitigation

Monitoring

*Long-term Coastal Ecosystem Monitoring Program

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multi-system: vegetation cover type* meteorologic parameters* air quality* atmospheric deposition* ground water hydrology*

Monitoring

*Long-term Coastal Ecosystem Monitoring Program

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Research - In Press & Recently Published

Smith, S.M. 2007. Removal of salt-killed vegetation during tidal restoration of a New England salt marsh: effects on wrack movement and the establishment of native halophytes. Ecological Restoration 24:268-273.

Lyons, P., C. Thornber, J. Portnoy, and E. Gwilliam. In press. Dynamics of Macroalgal Blooms along the Cape Cod National Seashore. Northeastern Naturalist.

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Research - In Press & Recently Published

Tupper, T. A. and R. P.Cook. 2008. Habitat variables influencing breeding effort in northern clade Bufo fowleri: Implications for conservation. Applied Herpetology 5:101-119.

Martin, L. 2008. Simulation of groundwater flow at Beach Point, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Cape Cod National Seashore. Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NRPC/WRD/NRTR-2008/111. National Park Service, Fort Collins, Colorado.

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Research - Near Completion Characterization of breeding

habitat and impacts of road kill for the Eastern spadefoot toad (Timm - UMass)

20th Century dune migration, wetland formation, and hydrological change at CCNS (Foreman - U of I, Smith - CCNS)Comparison of mercury in

atmospheric deposition and in fish using the natural continental gradient in atmospheric deposition of mercury (Colman - USGS, Lee - CCNS)

Preliminary assessment of fish utilization in the waters adjacent to CCNS (Esty - URI)

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Research - Recently InitiatedA demographic study and experimental restoration of Corema conradii at CCNS (VonHolle - UCF)

Preliminary evaluation of common eider die-off at CCNS (Ellis - Tufts, Cook - CCNS)

Evaluating the status of spawning horseshoe crabs, Limulus polyphemus, within CCNS (James-Pirri - URI)

Cape Cod shoreline change and resource protection: Century-scale change and sediment flux (Giese - PCCS, Adams - CCNS)

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Inventory, Monitoring, Research . . . Current and Future Questions:

Inventory, modeling for Herring River Restoration EISEast Harbor water quality / nutrient dynamicsPre- and post-restoration monitoring at Hatches Harbor, EH, HR

Long-term Coastal Ecosystem Monitoring Program projects

Salt marsh dieback

Atmospheric deposition monitoring synthesisAquifer flux of Ca, Hg, NAssess Hg levels in estuarine food webs

Turkey / quail population assessment and monitoring methods

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Inventory, Monitoring, Research . . . Current and Future Questions:

IPCC, 2001

water & air temperatures, humidity, precipitationsea level rise, tidal & groundwater hydrology, saltmarsh retreat storm frequency / timing / intensity, shoreline dynamicsocean acidificationnative and non-native species range changes, phenologyimpacts of human infrastructure demands

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Who does all this great work? Some very very smart people:

Dr. Bob Cook - Wildlife EcologistDr. John Portnoy - Ecologist (forever on our

speed dial)Judith Oset - Lab TechnicianKelly Chapman - Hydrology TechnicianKrista Lee - Chemist, Lab ManagerMark Adams - GIS SpecialistMary Hake - Shorebird BiologistDr. Megan Tyrrell - Research & Monitoring

CoordinatorDr. Steve Smith - Plant Ecologist