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Project Title: Hydrologic Forecasting for Characterization of Non-linear Response
of Freshwater Wetlands to Climatic and Land Use Change in the Susquehanna River Basin
Investigator(s): Denice
Wardrop, Rob
Brooks, Kevin
Dressler, Chris
Duffy, William
Easterling, Ray
Najjar, Rich
Ready, and Jim Shortle
Sponsor: National
Science Foundation
Objective: To characterize nonlinear responses to global climate change in linked
aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems through
- Selection of a linked terrestrial-aquatic ecosystem
that provides critical ecosystem services and ecological functions,
- Characterization of
various global change scenarios, incorporating both climate and land cover, and a method of
assessing their effect on the identified ecosystem through the primary forcing factor of hydrology
(both alone and in conjunction with other human-associated stressors),
- Identification of
potential nonlinear ecological responses (sensu Scheffer et al., 2002) in the selected ecosystem
as a result of these changes, and
- Estimation of the resultant change in ecosystem services
on a watershed and Basin-wide scale in the Susquehanna River Basin.
Approach: Our general approach to investigating the response of freshwater wetlands to climatic
and land use change is based on tools and products of four previous EPA-STAR grants, and involves
the following series of activities:
- Develop scenarios of climate and land cover change, operating on a scale of decades, relevant
to the Susquehanna River Basin (SRB).
- Using these scenarios, in conjunction with a coupled surface-ground
water model, develop a number of predictive hydrologic scenarios for a collection of 11-digit
HUC watersheds representing a range of human-associated land uses in the SRB.
- Characterize
the relationships between hydrologic and landcover parameters and ecosystem characteristics
and services in wetlands of various types in the SRB, focusing on those with preliminary evidence
of non-linearity and/or thresholds.
- Utilize the predicted hydrologic scenarios to forecast changes
in ecosystem services across the entire Susquehanna River Basin, clearly identifying where
and when non-linearities and/or thresholds in response occur, utilizing a series of unique statistical
tools to develop a probability surface.
Expected Results: We will develop a unique analytical method for prediction of climate and land
cover change impacts, incorporating the forecasting of hydrologic conditions, which can be used
to identify thresholds and non-linearities in the functional performance of freshwater wetlands.
Any set of hydrologic/land cover change conditions can then be placed upon the probability surface,
allowing the statistical model to be used in a predictive fashion. The method could be applied
to a wide variety of aquatic ecosystems for which state changes occur over either a spatial and
temporal extent, or both.