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Ecological and physical performance measures of four built sustainable shorelines along the Hudson River, New York

Ecological and physical performance measures of four built sustainable shorelines along the Hudson River, New York

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From 2010 to 2018, the Science Collaborative supported several phases of the Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines Project, which engages a regional research team to quantify the ecological functions and physical stresses on the full range of Hudson River shorelines. This research is the basis for the development of information and tools needed by regulators, engineers, and resource managers to identify the best settings and approaches for sustainable shoreline protection in the Hudson River Estuary. The work has included the establishment of a distributed demonstration network of seven sites, with varying modes of sustainable shoreline construction, along the Hudson.

From 2015-2018, the team worked closely with regulators, engineers, and land managers to 1) develop and field-validate a rapid assessment protocol manual for physical and ecological functions of ecologically enhanced shorelines and 2) train local land managers in the protocols. The project helped to solidify confidence in the suitability of novel shoreline techniques in the Hudson River Estuary and has enabled local managers to track performance into the future.

In field validating and training local managers in the rapid assessment protocols, living shorelines performance data were collected at four sites along the Hudson River. Sites where these data were collected include the Coxsackie Boat Launch, Esopus Meadows Preserve, Foundry Dock Park, and Beczak-Habirshaw Park and Tidal Marsh. This dataset includes a suite of measures of ecological and physical functions of built sustainable shoreline structures at these sites. The file format of the dataset is an Excel spreadsheet.

The dataset description provides more detail about the dataset generated by the project.