PA13B-05
Generating relevant climate adaptation science tools in concert with local natural resource agencies

Monday, 14 December 2015: 14:40
103 (Moscone South)
Lisa Micheli, Pepperwood Preserve, Terrestrial Biodiversity Climate Change Collaborative (TCB3.org), Santa Rosa, CA, United States, Lorraine E Flint, USGS California Water Science Center Sacramento, Sacramento, CA, United States, Sam Veloz, Point Blue Conservation Science, Petaluma, CA, United States, Nicole E Heller, Dwight Center for Conservation Science, Pepperwood Preserve, Santa Rosa, CA, United States and Terrestrial Biodiversity Climate Change Collaborative (TBC3.org)
Abstract:
To create a framework for adapting to climate change, decision makers operating at the urban-wildland interface need to define climate vulnerabilities in the context of site-specific opportunities and constraints relative to water supply, land use suitability, wildfire risks, ecosystem services and quality of life. Pepperwood’s TBC3.org is crafting customized climate vulnerability assessments with selected water and natural resource agencies of California’s Sonoma, Marin, Napa and Mendocino counties under the auspices of Climate Ready North Bay, a public-private partnership funded by the California Coastal Conservancy. Working directly with managers from the very start of the process to define resource-specific information needs, we are developing high-resolution, spatially-explicit data products to help local governments and agency staff implement informed and effective climate adaptation strategies.

 

Key preliminary findings for the region using the USGS’ Basin Characterization Model (at a 270 m spatial resolution) include a unidirectional trend, independent of greater or lesser precipitation, towards increasing climatic water deficits across model scenarios. Therefore a key message is that managers will be facing an increasingly arid environment. Companion models translate the impacts of shifting climate and hydrology on vegetation composition and fire risks. The combination of drought stress on water supplies and native vegetation with an approximate doubling of fire risks may demand new approaches to watershed planning. Working with agencies we are exploring how to build capacity for protection and enhancement of key watershed functions with a focus on groundwater recharge, facilitating greater drought tolerance in forest and rangeland systems, and considering more aggressive approaches to management of fuel loads. Lessons learned about effective engagement include the need for extended in-depth dialog, translation of key climate adaptation questions into deliverable metrics and indicators, and the need to take time to digest and formulate results in terms of adaptive management actions. Agencies also express a benefit in using Climate Ready results to raise public awareness of the resource challenges that may lay ahead.