| Literature DB >> 27734086 |
Jordan M West1, Catherine A Courtney2, Anna T Hamilton3, Britt A Parker4, Susan H Julius5, Jennie Hoffman6, Karen H Koltes7, Petra MacGowan8.
Abstract
The interactive and cumulative impacts of climate change on natural resources such as coral reefs present numerous challenges for conservation planning and management. Climate change adaptation is complex due to climate-stressor interactions across multiple spatial and temporal scales. This leaves decision makers worldwide faced with local, regional, and global-scale threats to ecosystem processes and services, occurring over time frames that require both near-term and long-term planning. Thus there is a need for structured approaches to adaptation planning that integrate existing methods for vulnerability assessment with design and evaluation of effective adaptation responses. The Corals and Climate Adaptation Planning project of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force seeks to develop guidance for improving coral reef management through tailored application of a climate-smart approach. This approach is based on principles from a recently-published guide which provides a framework for adopting forward-looking goals, based on assessing vulnerabilities to climate change and applying a structured process to design effective adaptation strategies. Work presented in this paper includes: (1) examination of the climate-smart management cycle as it relates to coral reefs; (2) a compilation of adaptation strategies for coral reefs drawn from a comprehensive review of the literature; (3) in-depth demonstration of climate-smart design for place-based crafting of robust adaptation actions; and (4) feedback from stakeholders on the perceived usefulness of the approach. We conclude with a discussion of lessons-learned on integrating climate-smart design into real-world management planning processes and a call from stakeholders for an "adaptation design tool" that is now under development.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation planning; Climate change; Coral reefs; Decision making; Natural resource management; Vulnerability
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27734086 PMCID: PMC5219003 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-016-0774-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Fig. 1Climate-smart approach for adaptation planning and implementation. a Key characteristics of climate-smart conservation; b the climate-smart conservation (planning) cycle; c climate-smart themes; and d climate-smart general adaptation strategies (Stein et al. 2014)
Fig. 2The climate-smart conservation cycle with the CCAP compendium framework
Comparison of general adaptation strategies
| General adaptation strategies for multiple ecosystem types (Stein et al. | Coral reef specific strategies for multiple conservation objectives (Fernandes et al. | Coral reef specific strategies for multiple conservation objectives (The Nature Conservancy |
|---|---|---|
| A. Reduce non-climate stresses | • Threat reduction | • Manage local stressors |
| • Reduce land-based impacts | ||
| • Manage fisheries | ||
| B. Protect key ecosystem features | • Protect critical areas | • Establish marine protected areas |
| C. Ensure connectivity | • Incorporate connectivity | • Establish marine protected areas networks |
| D. Restore structure and function | • Sustainable use | • Facilitate passive restoration |
| • Manage for social resilience | ||
| E. Protect refugia | • Protect critical areas | • Manage for ocean acidification |
| F. Relocate organisms | N/A | • Conduct active restoration |
| G. Support evolutionary potential | • Risk spreading | • Establish marine protected areas networks |
Excerpt from the CCAP compendium showing selected general adaptation strategies, adaptation options, and design considerations (see Supplementary Online Material for full list)
| General adaptation strategies and adaptation options | Climate-smart design considerations |
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| Minimize localized human stressors (e.g., pollution, fishing pressure) that hinder the ability of species or ecosystems to withstand or adjust to climatic events | |
| i. Minimize land-based pollution due to excessive loadings of suspended sediments and nutrients from agriculture, deforestation, urbanization, and other land uses | • How will climate change-related shifts in precipitation patterns and hydrology affect runoff of sediments and nutrients from different land use types to coastal waters? |
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| Focus management on structural characteristics (e.g., geophysical stage), organisms, or areas (e.g., spawning sites) that represent important “underpinnings” or “keystones” of the current or future system of interest | |
| i. Manage functional species and groups necessary for maintaining the health of reefs and other ecosystems | • What is the vulnerability of functional species and groups (e.g., herbivores, apex predators) to the interaction of climate change with other human and natural stressors, and in what locations are they most vulnerable? |
| • What management options can be employed, and in which locations, to minimize impacts on the most vulnerable species and groups? | |
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| Protect and restore habitats that facilitate movement of organisms (and gene flow) among resource patches | |
| i. Identify and manage networks of resilient reefs connected by currents | • Which areas have demonstrated resistance to/or recovery from exposure to climate change impacts? |
| • Which areas are projected to have less exposure to climate change impacts (e.g., increased sea surface temperatures, decreased ocean pH) and could therefore serve as refugia? | |
| • How will climate change affect currents that provide connectivity between resilient areas? | |
| • What are the implications of this information for design of managed area networks to maximize connectivity and maintain it into the future? | |
Fig. 3Flow chart for using the CCAP compendium in step 4 of the climate-smart conservation cycle
Vulnerability Exercise for Stakeholder Workshop
| Since information on climate impacts and vulnerabilities is one of the inputs needed in Step 4 of the climate-smart cycle, a desktop vulnerability assessment was developed as a resource for the participants. While there are many methodologies that could be chosen to complete a vulnerability assessment for a site, for illustrative purposes we used the LEAP guide: “Climate Change Adaptation for Coral Triangle Communities: A Guide for Vulnerability Assessment and Local Early Action Planning” (U.S. Coral Triangle Initiative Support Program, 2013). The LEAP method was applied to develop a vulnerability assessment based on climate information and projections for the main Hawaiian archipelago and information on threats to reefs in the watershed management and conservation action plans for West Maui. This desktop assessment was provided and used hand in hand with the CCAP Compendium at the workshop. |
Examples from the stakeholder workshop, based on a case study using West Maui management plans
| Action | Climate-smart design consideration | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Existing | Install water bars, terraces, and microbasins in dirt roads in agricultural areas | How will increasingly severe storms affect the volume of runoff onto the near shore coral reef? How can the design be adjusted to account for these effects? |
| Modified | Install terraces adjacent to dirt roads in agricultural areas to reduce sediment/nutrient loads by x and y percent | How will increasingly severe storm events, in combination with increasingly frequent dry periods, affect the volume of runoff onto the near shore coral reef? What will be the spatial pattern of these effects with respect to the location of dirt roads in agricultural areas? How will the design of terraces need to be adjusted to: place them at locations of worst erosion; ensure their capacity to effectively reduce sediment/nutrient loads by x and y percent; and account for how maintenance and replacement schedules would need to change? | |
| 2 | New | Protect and manage adjacent (Olowalu) coral reef areas that are connected hydrodynamically and can serve as recruitment sources for coral reefs in West Maui | How will climate change affect connectivity of downstream reefs to Olowalu areas that are recruitment sources? How will climate change affect stressors to be managed in Olowalu areas (pollution, bleaching, disease, reduced calcification)? What are the implications of this for how we prioritize, replicate, represent and increase level of protection of Olowalu areas, possibly at a greater scale? |
Original Action #1 and design considerations developed in advance of the workshop are compared with modifications that reflect the results of the workshop exercise. “New” action #2 was identified as a gap by participants after reviewing the Compendium
Fig. 4Additional feedback loops in the climate-smart conservation cycle