4.4 Article

Resilience of US coastal wetlands to accelerating sea level rise

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2515-7620/ac6eef

Keywords

sea level rise; coastal wetlands; climate change

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Coastal wetlands provide valuable ecosystem services, but are threatened by rising sea levels. Protecting refugia and managing surface elevation change rate are crucial for maintaining wetland resilience.
Coastal wetlands provide a wide array of ecosystem services, valued at trillions of dollars per year globally. Although accelerating sea level rise (SLR) poses the long-term threat of inundation to coastal areas, wetlands may be sustained in two ways: by positive net surface-elevation change (SEC) from sediment and organic matter buildup and by accumulation, or horizontal migration into refugia-low-lying, undeveloped upland areas that become inundated. Using a simple model together with high-resolution elevation data, we provide, across the contiguous United States, analysis of the local effects of SLR, maximum SEC rates, and coastal development on the long-term resilience of coastal wetlands. We find that protecting current refugia is a critical factor for retaining wetlands under accelerating SLR. If refugia are conserved under an optimistic scenario (a high universal maximum SEC rate of 8 mm/yr and low greenhouse gas emissions), wetlands may increase by 25.0% (29.4%-21.5%; 50th, 5th-95th percentiles of SLR) by the end of the century. However, if refugia are developed under a more pessimistic scenario (a moderate universal maximum SEC rate of 3 mm/yr, high greenhouse gas emissions, and projections incorporating high ice-sheet contributions to SLR), wetlands may decrease by -97.0% (-82.3%-99.9%). These median changes in wetland area could result in an annual gain of similar to$222 billion compared to an annual loss of similar to$732 billion in ecosystem services in the US alone. Focusing on key management options for sustaining wetlands, we highlight areas at risk of losing wetlands and identify the benefits possible from conserving refugia or managing SEC rates.

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