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Climate Change and San Francisco Bay-Delta Tidal Wetlands

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Browns Island. Pond 2A. Carls. Bull Island. Restored marshes along the gradient. Pond 3 ... Browns Island. Reference Sites. Bull Island. Pond 2a. Carl's Marsh ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Climate Change and San Francisco Bay-Delta Tidal Wetlands


1
Climate Change and San Francisco Bay-Delta Tidal
Wetlands
V.T. Parker San Francisco State
University and L.M. Schile, J.C. Callaway
M.C. Vasey San Francisco State University and
University of San Francisco
2
Context Focal Area for Research
3
SF Bay-Delta Tidal Marshes Salinity Gradient
Brackish Marshes
Freshwater Marshes in the Delta
Salt Marshes
4
Historic marshes along gradient
Browns Island
China Camp
Coon Island
5
Restored marshes along the gradient
Carls
Bull Island
Pond 3
Pond 2A
6
San Francisco Bay Tidal Marshes
Species Diversity
Brackish Marshes
Freshwater Marshes in the Delta
Salt Marshes
Species Diversity
Species Diversity
Species Diversity
2-22 species
27-65 species
117 species
7
San Francisco Bay Tidal Marshes
Annual Primary Production
Brackish Marshes
Freshwater Marshes in the Delta
Salt Marshes
ANPP
ANPP
ANPP
700-1300 g m-2 yr-1
200-800 g m-2 yr-1
1300-2500 g m-2 yr-1
8
SF Bay-DeltaFreshwatergt Salt Marshes
  • Freshwater tidal marshes have 5-50 times more
    species than salt marshes
  • Freshwater tidal marshes have 3-12 times more
    primary production
  • Historic marshes have more species than restored
    marshes

9
What happens to these systems under projected
climate change?
10
Processes predicted to change
Increases in CO2 Rising temperatures More
rain/less snow-gtreduced snowpack-gt reduced
water flow in Bay-Delta in late summer Reduced
water flow-gtincreased salinity Rising sea level
11
Increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration
  • Generally good for C3 plants at beginning
  • Most wetland plants use C3 photosynthesis
  • Generally no improvement for C4 plants (meaning
    net relative loss of productivity)
  • Spartina foliosa and Distichlis spicata are two
    common C4 plants in SF Bay-Delta marshes

12
Temperature regime increases
6 global climate models for each of 4 different
historic and future scenarios. Northern
California will increase in temperature. The
models are ambivalent about precipitation, but
greater unpredictability
Dettinger 2005
13
Temperature effects on wetlands
  • Direct
  • Indirect

14
Direct effects-temperature
  • Influence on photosynthesis/respiration balance
    of dominant plants

respiration
photosynthesis
rate
temperature
15
Direct effects-temperature
  • Influence on photosynthesis/respiration balance
    of dominant plants

Increase in ANPP
rate
Mortality
Decrease in ANPP
temperature
16
Indirect Effects-temperature
  • Sierran snow pack melts earlier
  • Rivers flow earlier
  • Salinity increases upstream

17
Projected Salinity Changes Critical
Current Summer Salinities
Projected Summer Salinities in 2060
Figure from Noah Knowles
18
Salinity Effects on Tidal Wetlands
  • Shifts composition
  • Reduces diversity
  • Reduces productivity
  • Inhibits organic peat production
  • Changes soil structure
  • Critical thresholds at low salinity levels

19
Indirect effects, cont.
  • Increase in the rate of sea level rise

(from IPCC)
20
Inundation and floodingcurrent conditions
21
Marsh Surface Elevations Percent Time Wet
Restored Sites
Reference Sites
Browns Island
Bull Island
Coon Island
Pond 2a
Number of Observations
Carls Marsh
Restored sites are inundated longer than natural
sites
22
Marsh Surface Elevations Plant Diversity
Restored Sites
Reference Sites
Bull Island
Browns Island
MHW
MHHW
Pond 2a
Coon Island
Number of Species
Carls Marsh
Diversity peaks at MHHW at reference sites lower
at restored sites
Mean high water - MHW
Mean higher high water - MHHW
23
Coon Island
Within a site, elevation predicts distribution of
species
c
c
c
c
b
b
b
b
b
b
a
a
MTL
MHW
MHHW
24
Schoenoplectus acutustule
inundation time predicts distribution
Among sites,
Larry Allian
c
b
a
a
a
a
Formerly known as Scirpus acutus
25
Bolboschoenus maritimusAlkali bulrush
a
b
c
d
a
b
c
c
Formerly known as Scirpus maritimus
26
Schoenoplectus americanusCommon three-square
a
a
c
b
b
a
Formerly known as Scirpus americanus
27
Sarcocornia pacificaPickleweed
a
c
b
a
c
a
b
c
Formerly known as Salicornia virginica
28
Site-level Elevation and Inundation Patterns
  • Restored sites differ in length of inundation,
    and elevation at which species diversity peaks
  • Elevation important in determining plant
    distributions within sites
  • Among sites, inundation patterns for any species
    are relatively similar, but elevations may differ
  • Salinity another influence needing consideration

29
Likely influences of climate change on tidal
wetlands
  • Negative impacts
  • Increase in inundation
  • Increase in salinity
  • Increase in temperature?
  • Positive impacts
  • Increase in CO2
  • Increase in temperature?

Restored marshes lagging behind reference sites
30
  • Given environmental change
  • If temperature increases
  • If salinity increases
  • If marsh substrate accretion fails to keep up
    with sea level rise and inundation increases
  • What might be a predictable scenario for SF
    Bay-Delta?

31
Sarcocornia pacifica
  • Sarcocornia occurs in a diversity of salinity and
    inundation conditions

formerly Salicornia virginica
32
Sarcocornia pacifica
  • Used spatially variability as a natural
    experiment to ask the question
    What happens to Sarcocornia
    productivity under higher salinities and more
    inundation?

Multiple harvests to assess annual production
under a variety of salinity and inundation
conditions
33
While annual productivity increases with height
The pattern with salinity seems scattered and
complex
34
Until well-drained locations are separated from
poorly-drained sites...
Well-drained plots
Poorly-drained plots
35
Results Natural Experiment
  • Increases in salinity and inundation (predicted
    environmental changes) Result
    in significant reductions in wetland productivity
    in the species most likely to expand

low productivity?
36
Conclusions
  • Reducing the rate of change in wetlands depends
    on maintaining or enhancing freshwater flows into
    the Delta in the summer/fall periods (levee
    protection, less diversion)
  • Restoring new marshes sooner might increase their
    likelihood of long-term success and persistence

37
What havent I mentioned?
  • Temperature, salinity, inundation all strongly
    influence other major ecosystem processes within
    wetlands that have strong links to terrestrial
    and pelagic systems
  • Decomposition
  • Soil organic matter accumulation
  • Every aspect of nitrogen dynamics
  • Plant composition shifts, seedling establishment,
    seed bank persistence

38
To keep from getting stuck in the details
39
Global Warming Impact on SF Bay-Delta
Increasing Temperatures
Smaller Snowpack
Ppt Shifts from Snow to rain
Lower Summer flows
Earlier melt Spring floods
Increased inundation
Reduced Peat formation
Increased Estuarine salinity
Sea level Rise
CO2 increases
mixed
40
these environmental changes impact the
performance of wetland vegetation
and potentially lead to
41
Acknowledgements CA Parks, CA Fish Game, EB
Regional Park District, a large and excellent
field crew, and colleagues in the IRWM project
meaning marshes may fade to blue
Loss of species, reduction in annual
productivity, with cascading effects on linked
terrestrial and pelagic systems
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