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CESN Main PageCoastal & Estuarine Science News (CESN)Coastal & Estuarine Science News (CESN) is an electronic publication providing brief summaries of select articles from the journal Estuaries & Coasts that emphasize management applications of scientific findings. It is a free electronic newsletter delivered to subscribers on a bimonthly basis. You can have future issues delivered to your email inbox on a bimonthly basis. Sign up today! 2013 JuneContentsDissolving Misconceptions about Ocean Acidification: How Important is it in Coastal Ecosystems? Dissolving Misconceptions about Ocean Acidification: How Important is it in Coastal Ecosystems? Among the hottest of hot topics in environmental science is ocean acidification, the reduction of pH in the open ocean attributable to anthropogenic CO2 emissions. This issue is particularly problematic for calcifying organisms, which have trouble depositing and maintaining shells as pH declines because they are essentially dissolved by the seawater around them. Although ocean acidification is understudied and of serious concern, the annual 2013 H. T. Odum Synthesis Essay, recently published in Estuaries and Coasts, points out that pH dynamics are very different in coastal ecosystems than in the open ocean: pH is much more variable in coastal waters, and influenced by a broader suite of factors. So, is anthropogenic ocean acidification important in coastal areas? The Runaway Weed: Study Concludes that Phragmites australis Management has not been Effective In the late 1800s, an invader landed on U.S. shores, which, many studies have shown, has wreaked havoc on our coastal ecosystems: the Eurasian genotype of the wetland grass Phragmites australis. Managers have spent decades and millions of dollars trying to beat it into submission. With so much effort focused on Phragmites management, it seems like it should be on its way out, but success of such management programs has rarely been evaluated. A research team recently assessed Phragmites management using a cross-institutional survey of 285 land managers from U.S. public and private conservation organizations. Survey participants were asked to report on their management objectives, control methods, expenditures, and outcomes of Phragmites management initiatives. The researchers found that from 2005 to 2009 the responding organizations spent more than $4.6 million per year on P. australis management, and that 94% of responding organizations used herbicide to treat a total area of about 80,000 ha (about 90,000 ha are managed for Phragmites invasion overall). Very few management programs adequately monitor the outcomes of their actions, so evaluating outcomes was difficult. Analysis of outcomes in this study was largely undertaken by asking managers their impressions of the results of their projects. Despite the large investments in Phragmites management, few organizations actually accomplished their management objectives, and there was no relationship between resources invested and management success. When One (Management Goal) is Not Enough: Researchers Propose Decision Support Tool for Understanding Tradeoffs Coastal management has evolved to focus on ecosystem function and restoration rather than management of a single species or individual ecosystem services. Ecosystem-based management comes with many challenges, including coordinating among the many agencies often responsible for managing a given area. An even more onerous problem is that some outcomes are competing or even mutually exclusive; tradeoffs are often a fact of life when deciding among management goals and initiatives. How can these tradeoffs be examined, predicted, and incorporated into decision-making? A recent project undertaken by a team of researchers and managers borrowed some simple models from economic theory and multi-objective decision making to develop a management action-ecosystem services matrix for estuarine ecosystems to assess tradeoffs. A diverse group of scientists and managers was convened and asked to use evidence from the literature and case studies to assign positive and negative values to the effects of various management actions on a range of ecosystem services. The matrix allowed patterns to be observed; for example, the matrix made it easy to see when a management action had multiple positive effects, or a positive impact on one ecosystem service but negative impacts on others. Review Outlines Factors Influencing Fecal Contamination in Coastal Waters and Shellfish Shellfish beds in coastal and estuarine waters are vulnerable to a variety of types of contamination, depending on their specific location, but the most hazardous to human health is fecal contamination. Because fecal contamination can cause mild to severe gastrointestinal problems for human consumers, managers are careful to monitor shellfish beds for indicators of fecal contamination. One problem with this approach is that there is not always a good correlation between concentrations of fecal indicator organisms such as Enterococcus and E. coli (FIOs) in the water and in the shellfish themselves. A recent review outlined the environmental factors that influence the concentration of FIOs in coastal waters and their accumulation in bivalves. |