| Literature DB >> 29934650 |
Jordan M West1, Catherine A Courtney2, Anna T Hamilton3, Britt A Parker4, David A Gibbs5, Patricia Bradley6, Susan H Julius7.
Abstract
Scientists and managers of natural resources have recognized an urgent need for improved methods and tools to enable effective adaptation of management measures in the face of climate change. This paper presents an Adaptation Design Tool that uses a structured approach to break down an otherwise overwhelming and complex process into tractable steps. The tool contains worksheets that guide users through a series of design considerations for adapting their planned management actions to be more climate-smart given changing environmental stressors. Also provided with other worksheets is a framework for brainstorming new adaptation options in response to climate threats not yet addressed in the current plan. Developed and tested in collaboration with practitioners in Hawai'i and Puerto Rico using coral reefs as a pilot ecosystem, the tool and associated reference materials consist of worksheets, instructions and lessons-learned from real-world examples. On the basis of stakeholder feedback from expert consultations during tool development, we present insights and recommendations regarding how to maximize tool efficiency, gain the greatest value from the thought process, and deal with issues of scale and uncertainty. We conclude by reflecting on how the tool advances the theory and practice of assessment and decision-making science, informs higher level strategic planning, and serves as a platform for a systematic, transparent and inclusive process to tackle the practical implications of climate change for management of natural resources.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation planning; Climate change; Coral reefs; Decision making; Natural resource management; Vulnerability
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29934650 PMCID: PMC6153638 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-018-1065-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Worksheet 1A of the Adaptation Design Tool
| Worksheet 1A | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | A2 | A3 | A4 | A5 | A6 | A7 | |
| Action number | Existing management action | Target stressor(s) | Climate change effects on stressor(s): direction, magnitude, mechanism, uncertainty | Timing of climate change effects | Implications for effectiveness metrics and how to measure them | Notes | |
| COLUMN DESCRIPTION | Provide a sequential ID number for each action. | List each site-specific action from your management plan and/or from Activity 2. (Color code actions from Activity 2 as ‘new’ actions being added to the original list of ‘existing’ actions.) | Identify the stressor(s) (e.g., pollutant, fishing pressure, etc.) that the management action targets. (An individual action may address more than one stressor.) | Describe expected climate change impacts on the target stressors. This includes information on the direction, magnitude, and mechanism of change along with level of uncertainty. This will support consideration of how actions would have to be modified (e.g., scaled, placed, timed, engineered) to remain effective. Supporting materials needed include vulnerability and resilience information, climate projections, etc. | Indicate the anticipated timing of when climate change will affect the target stressor(s). This informs when the action is needed, sequencing with other actions, and the time frame under which effectiveness should be evaluated. Mid-century is a management-relevant time frame commonly used; however, this also could include seasonal outlooks/forecasts, or shorter-term events like El Niño. | Identify metric(s) to be used to assess technical performance (i.e. effectiveness) of the action. If possible, suggest targets for quantitative or qualitative changes in the stressor/ metric that would be used to measure effectiveness. Describe how monitoring (e.g., frequency, location, duration, etc.) might need to be modified given climate change effects on the stressor. | Make notes on reasoning, concerns, or information gaps essential for: |
| ILLUSTRATIVE GUÁNICA BAY RESULT | 1 | Establish coral nurseries | • Land-based stressors (nutrients, sediments, etc.) | • Land-based stressors will increase with increased rainfall. Magnitude unknown. | • Precipitation changes (and ensuing consequences, such as erosion) occurring now | • Need to monitor success of the basins during larger storms | • Nurseries may sequester carbon; additional research needed |
| ILLUSTRATIVE WEST MAUI RESULT | 2 | Establish stormwater infiltration basins in urban areas to remove contaminants from stormwater and recharge ground water | • Debris, sediment, nutrients, other contaminants (e.g. pesticides, herbicides) adsorbed on the soil | • Precipitation depends on the model: decreased rainfall during the wet season (5–20% (statistical models)); or, increased rainfall during the wet season (0–25%) and wetter in dry season (dynamical models) | • SST consequences have already occurred but will intensify in the future | • Effectiveness metric is what percent of water infiltrates to ground water and what percent of contaminants is removed | • Infiltration basins near the coast will be less effective under sea level rise |
Worksheet 1B of the Adaptation Design Tool
| Worksheet 1B | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B1 | B2 | B3 | B4 | B5 | B6 | B7 | B8 | |
| Action number | Existing management action | Changes in effectiveness of management action due to: climate impacts on target stressor | Changes in effectiveness of management action due to: climate impacts on management action | Time frame or constraint for using the action and implementation (e.g., urgency, longer or shorter term) | What changes are needed to adapt the action (place, time, and engineering design) | Climate-Smart Management Action | Notes | |
| COLUMN DESCRIPTION | Transfer action numbers from Worksheet 1A. | Transfer management actions from Worksheet 1A (including any management actions identified because of Activity 2). | Describe how climate impacts on the stressor will change the effectiveness of the management action over its implementation and functional lifetime. Will the action be able to handle changes in the target stressor? | For actions that involve physical structures or elements, describe how climate change may directly impact the management action in ways that will change the effectiveness of the management action over its implementation and functional lifetime. Could the action be physically destroyed by climate change impacts? | Identify temporal considerations, including: (1) urgency due to anticipated time frame of climate change effects on the action and (2) short-term and long-term needs for planning and implementation of the action (including lead-time for design, permitting, construction, or other enabling conditions). | Describe the changes needed to adapt the design of the action in terms of place, time and engineering design. Be sure to review and consider the information from all previous columns including the Notes columns. | Revise the original management action (from Column B2) to incorporate the climate-smart design considerations. Be as specific as possible. | Make notes to: |
| ILLUSTRATIVE GUÁNICA BAY RESULT | 1 | Establish coral nurseries | • Survival of nursery corals may be reduced due to increased smothering by sediment | • Entire nurseries could be destroyed by large storms | • Urgent – huge loss of reefs | • Choose strains/clades that are resilient to high temperatures, ocean acidification, and land-based pollutants | Establish coral nurseries with corals resilient to high temperatures, ocean acidification, and land-based pollutants. Use a wide range of species. Pipe cooler water from greater depths to nursery to prevent heat stress during potential bleaching periods. Nurseries should be movable to protect them from the increasingly frequent, large storms that are expected. | • Additional long-term benefit of shoreline protection if reefs were restored |
| ILLUSTRATIVE WEST MAUI RESULT | 2 | Establish stormwater infiltration basins in urban areas to remove contaminants from stormwater and recharge ground water | • If higher flows, basins may not be able to contain stormwater | • Basins may be washed away in larger storms | • Urgent – to stop impacts of urban pollutants on the reef | • Adjust outflow pipe to handle larger precipitation events | Establish infiltration basins designed to accommodate larger runoff volumes and sediment loads, unless smaller runoff volumes seem more likely. Clean accumulated sediment from basins more often to prevent clogging and be prepared to reconstruct basins or parts of basins after larger storms. Basins should have draining mechanism to keep from overflowing and inundating surrounding area. Basins should be created outside the area likely to be affected by SLR. Increased ponding of detained stormwater due to larger storms should be prevented in order to prevent them from becoming mosquito breeding grounds. | • Will climate change affect ground water, and how would those changes interact with infiltration basins? |
Worksheet 2 of the Adaptation Design Tool
| Worksheet 2 Identify additional site-specific adaptation actions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COLUMN DESCRIPTION | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| General Adaptation Strategy | Definition | Potential New Site-Specific Action | Key Vulnerabilities Addressed | |
| General Adaptation Strategies from the CCAP Compendium | Definition of general strategies, placed in the context of future as well as current conditions, including climate-related impacts. | Craft new, potential place-based actions (i.e., general options from the Compendium, made into actions specific to your location) to address gaps in existing/planned activities. Transfer these actions to column 2 of Worksheet 1A as additions to run them through Activity 1; color code these actions to distinguish them as ‘new’ actions being added to the original list of ‘existing’ actions. | Describe what key vulnerabilities are being addressed by this action (that may not have been sufficiently addressed in your plan thus far). This documents the logic for why the action is needed/how it addresses the impacts of particular climate stressor-interactions as identified in the vulnerability information. | |
| ILLUSTRATIVE GUÁNICA BAY RESULT | A. Reduce non-climate stresses | Minimize localized human stressors (e.g., pollution, fishing pressure, coastal development) that hinder the ability of species or ecosystems to withstand or adjust to climatic events | • Convert all homes with on-site sewage disposal systems to tertiary level waste-water treatment | Sea level, rainfall, extremes, hurricanes and storms |
| ILLUSTRATIVE WEST MAUI RESULT | B. Protect key ecosystem features | 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) | • Expand or duplicate the herbivore replenishment areas in reefs in the 5 watersheds and adjacent source areas in Olowalu, North Kihei | Coral bleaching events that impacted reefs in 2014–2015 |
Fig. 1Climate-Smart Cycle with Adaptation Design Framework (Stein et al. 2014; West et al. 2016)
Fig. 2Flow Chart of Activities of the Adaptation Design Tool
Comparison of setting and planning context for testing the Adaptation Design Tool
| Location Characteristics | Guánica Bay Watershed, Puerto Rico | West Maui, Hawaiʻi |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic setting | Single, highly modified watershed and adjacent bay and off-shore coral reefs | Multiple watersheds and adjacent exposed reef area |
| Key non-climate threats | • Upland erosion in the coffee growing regions | • Upland erosion from former agricultural lands |
| Planning framework | The Watershed Management Plan undergoing revision | Conservation Action Plan and three Watershed Management Plans undergoing expansion to two additional watersheds |
| Availability of information on vulnerability to climate change | Information on climate change and vulnerability summarized from multiple information sources including an island-wide vulnerability assessment for Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico Climate Change Council (PRCCC) | Information on climate change and vulnerability summarized from multiple information sources including the Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment (Keener et al. |
aStressor not addressed in Center for Watershed Protection (CWP) (2008); being addressed in the updated watershed management plan
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| A. Reduce Non-Climate Stresses | Minimize localized human stressors that hinder the ability of species or ecosystems to withstand or adjust to climatic events |
| B. Ensure Connectivity | Protect habitats that facilitate movement of organisms (and gene flow) among resource patches |
| C. Support Evolutionary Potential | Protect a variety of species, populations and ecosystems in multiple places to bet-hedge against losses from climate disturbances, and where possible manage these systems to assist positive evolutionary change |
| D. Protect Key Ecosystem Features | Focus management on structural characteristics, organisms, or areas that represent important ‘underpinnings’ or ‘keystones’ of the current or future system of interest |
| E. Restore Structure & Function | Rebuild, modify or transform ecosystems that have been lost or compromised, in order to restore desired structures and functions |
| F. Protect Refugia | Protect areas less affected by climate change as sources of ‘seed’ for recovery or as destinations for climate-sensitive migrants |
| G. Relocate Organisms | Engage in human-facilitated transplanting of organisms from one location to another in order to bypass a barrier (e.g., conflicting current) |