Ecological Effects of Climate-Driven Salinity Variation in the San Francisco Estuary: Can We Anticipate and Manage the Coming Changes?

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
C. Ghalambor, Edwin Grosholtz, E. Gross, K. Jeffries, J. Largier, S. McCormick, Ted R. Sommer, Johnathan Velotta, A. Whitehead
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Climate change-driven sea level rise and altered precipitation regimes are predicted to alter patterns of salt intrusion within the San Francisco Estuary. A central question is: Can we use existing knowledge and future projections to predict and manage the anticipated ecological impacts? This was the subject of a 2018 symposium entitled “Ecological and Physiological Impacts of Salinization of Aquatic Systems from Human Activities.” The symposium brought together an inter-disciplinary group of scientists and researchers, resource managers, and policy-makers. Here, we summarize and review the presentations and discussions that arose during the symposium. From a historical perspective, salt intrusion has changed substantially over the past 10,000 years as a result of changing climate patterns, with additional shifts from recent anthropogenic effects. Current salinity patterns in the San Francisco Estuary are driven by a suite of hydrodynamic processes within the given contexts of water management and geography. Based on climate projections for the coming century, significant changes are expected in the processes that determine the spatial and temporal patterns of salinity. Given that native species—including fishes such as the Delta Smelt and Sacramento Splittail—track favorable habitats, exhibit physiological acclimation, and can adaptively evolve, we present a framework for assessing their vulnerability to altered salinity in the San Francisco Estuary. We then present a range of regulatory and structural management tools that are available to control patterns of salinity within the San Francisco Estuary. Finally, we identify major research priorities that can help fill critical gaps in our knowledge about future salinity patterns and the consequences of climate change and sea level rise. These research projects will be most effective with strong linkages and communication between scientists and researchers, resource managers, and policy-makers.
气候驱动的旧金山河口盐度变化的生态效应:我们能预测和管理即将到来的变化吗?
气候变化导致的海平面上升和降水制度的改变预计将改变旧金山河口内盐入侵的模式。一个核心问题是:我们能否利用现有的知识和对未来的预测来预测和管理预期的生态影响?这是2018年题为“人类活动对水生系统盐碱化的生态和生理影响”研讨会的主题。研讨会汇集了一个由科学家和研究人员、资源管理者和决策者组成的跨学科小组。在这里,我们总结和回顾研讨会期间出现的演讲和讨论。从历史的角度来看,在过去的1万年里,由于气候模式的变化,以及最近人为影响的额外变化,盐入侵发生了实质性的变化。在给定的水管理和地理背景下,旧金山河口目前的盐度模式是由一套水动力过程驱动的。根据对下个世纪的气候预估,预计决定盐度时空格局的过程将发生重大变化。考虑到本地物种(包括三角洲鱼和萨克拉门托裂尾鱼等鱼类)能找到有利的栖息地,表现出生理适应,并能适应进化,我们提出了一个框架来评估它们对旧金山河口盐度变化的脆弱性。然后,我们提出了一系列可用于控制旧金山河口盐度模式的监管和结构管理工具。最后,我们确定了主要的研究重点,可以帮助填补我们对未来盐度模式和气候变化和海平面上升的后果的知识的关键空白。如果科学家和研究人员、资源管理者和决策者之间有强有力的联系和沟通,这些研究项目将是最有效的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Environmental Science-Water Science and Technology
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
24 weeks
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