1. A Decade of Salt Marsh Elevation Change in New York City's Coastal Urban Parks.
- Author
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Hartig, Ellen Kracauer, Haight, Christopher, Hsu, Michael, Auyeung, Novem, Swadek, Rebecca, Ong, Jamie, Gornitz, Vivien, and Boger, Rebecca
- Subjects
WETLAND restoration ,SEA level ,UPLANDS ,GROUND cover plants ,TREND analysis ,SALT marshes - Abstract
Coastal salt marshes of the eastern United States are particularly vulnerable to accelerated sea level rise, and urban marshes are at greater risk of erosion, inundation, and conversion to mudflat if left unmanaged. To guide New York City (NYC) salt marsh restoration strategies, NYC Parks collected up to 10 years of salt marsh elevation change data through 2020 at six salt marsh sites using the Surface Elevation Table-Marker Horizon (SET-MH) method, conducted a salt marsh trends analysis to determine shoreline change from 1974 to 2012, and conducted a salt marsh conditions assessment. We found that the citywide average surface elevation trend of 3.31 mm yr
−1 was not significantly different from the 30-year (1990–2020) Relative Sea Level Rise of 4.23 mm yr−1 at The Battery, NY, tide station, probably due to high variability across and within sites. We also found that accretion rates differed across sites and watersheds, and sites situated lower in the tidal zone had higher accretion rates. Notably, Jamaica Bay's Idlewild salt marsh, long suspected of being sediment-starved and ranking lowest in our conditions assessment, had the highest accretion rate at 9.5 mm yr−1 . Our salt marsh trends analysis also showed marsh loss at the shoreline edge, bare ground cover, and other indicators of marsh degradation. In mitigating marsh loss, the design grades for our recent wetland restoration projects enlarge the upper elevation ranges of the low- and high-marsh zones and incorporate wider and more gradual slopes in upland transition zones to enable inland marsh migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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