These slides summarize a webinar given by Dwayne Porter on February 28, 2018 about why environmental data management is important and the role it plays in the NERRS System-wide Monitoring Program.
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Resources
A repository of data, publications, tools, and other products from project teams, Science Collaborative program, and partners.
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These slides summarize a webinar given by Susi Moser on January 10, 2018 on the Successful Adaptation Indicators and Metrics project, which focuses on measuring the success of climate adaptation.
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These slides summarize a webinar given by Danielle Boudreau and Syverine Bentz on December 20, 2017, on how they used scenario planning to overcome uncertainty around barriers to climate adaptation in southcentral Alaska.
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This model is a power-law based model developed by using data for four different wetlands in Waquoit Bay and Great Pond estuaries, MA. It was developed as part of a 2011 Collaborative Research project, "Bringing Wetlands to Market in Massachusetts."
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This lesson plan helps teachers and students understand the concept of blue carbon and the impacts of sea level rise on salt marshes.
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This document helps guide coastal and land managers in understanding the ways by which coastal blue carbon can help achieve coastal management goals.
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This document outlines procedures to use the Methodology for Tidal Wetland and Seagrass Restoration, approved by the Verified Carbon Standard, to estimate net greenhouse gas emission reductions and removals resulting from restoration of coastal wetlands.
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As part of the 2010 Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project, the project team conducted this forensic analysis of six sites on the Hudson River to study how each site responded to severe storms.
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This tool, developed for the 2011 Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project, can be used to provide a rough quantification of site attributes known to affect biota and ecological processes in the shore zone.
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This model was developed by the Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project team and can be used to understand the energy regimes impacting shorelines and to help identify suitable shoreline stabilization alternatives for sites along the Hudson River.