Eco-Voice Digest
 
 
Sunday, April 29th, 2012 #1290
 
 
 
In This Issue
FWC meeting May 2-3, Crystal River
Dirt's not Bad
CEPP PDT
SWF Oyster Working Group
Water Cycle and Global Warming
Lisa Beever on SLR
"Ding" Summer Programs
CREW Trust
Ban the Bottles?
Free Today - 'Glades
C-44 CERP Project
FACEBOOK

 

  

CR at bedtime
Caloosahatchee in charcoal
Mark Renz photo art

 

  

 

  

 

  

 

  

 

SW FL Oyster Working Group 

 

Mark your calendar. The meetings will all be held at the SW FL Regional Planning Council office in Fort Myers with webex available to all who would like to participate remotely.  

 

May 9th (12:30 - 4:30) - Discuss Restoration Methods, Monitoring Methodology, Success Criteria

May 25th (12:30 - 4:30) - Review Restoration Suitability Model Outputs & Discuss Suitable Restoration Sites by Estuary Segment

June 19th (8:00 - 12:00) - Review of Draft Restoration Plan

 

 

 

1. The CHNEP Oyster Restoration Plan will be a living science-based document which will be adapted as needed to incorporate new science and improved data.

2. The Restoration Plan will include maps of currentpriority restoration areas which will incorporate habitat suitability, areas of avoidance (e.g. channels, seagrass), and management/permitting considerations, these maps can be updated in the future to incorporate new data.

3. One of the reasons for the Restoration Plan is to provide a tool to help in obtaining funding and to help in the permitting process, by demonstrating how individual projects will contribute to a regional goal using regionally accepted methods etc.

4. The Restoration Plan will not be rigid, but will provide a suite of restoration methods and monitoring methodologies that are suitable for meeting the regional restoration goals, with the ability to add new methods as they are developed.

5. The CHNEP Oyster Restoration Goal will be based on consideration of 1) restorable acres of historical oyster reefs as documented by 1950s aerial mapping, and 2) acres of suitable restoration areas resulting from the model output. (Note: success of restoration will be discussed at the May 9th meeting)

6. The Suitable Restoration Site model will provide a broad-brush map of the most appropriate oyster restoration sites, a site-specific suitability assessment should be conducted to ensure any individual site is likely to result in successful restoration (e.g. consideration of spat, disease, predation, seagrass presence, endangered species presence).

 

 

More infomation contact : Jaime Boswell, jaimeboswell@live.com
 

 

 

  

 Water Cycle Study Examines Global Warming, Ocean's Salt Content   

 

Warming, Ocean's Salt Content

 

 

By: Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer

 

Global warming is revving up the planet's cycle of evaporation and precipitation, making wet places even wetter and dry places drier, a new study suggests.

A team of researchers found the intensity of the water cycle increased roughly 4 percent over the last half of the 20th century by examining changes in the ocean's salt content.

This means more movement of water between the locations where it's stored, such as the atmosphere, oceans and lakes. Their results indicate that as a result, salty places are becoming saltier due to more evaporation, while fresh places are becoming fresher due to more precipitation.

A warming world

During the study period, from 1950 to 2000, global surface temperatures rose 0.9 degrees F (0.5 degrees Celsius).

"There are all of these independent lines of evidence that climate is actually changing. What this result provides us with is another piece of the puzzle," said study researcher Paul Durack, a postdoctoral researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

Not only was the shift in the water cycle observable - with spatial patterns of evaporation and rainfall intensifying over the world's oceans - but the observations agreed with theoretical expectations for how climate change would affect the water cycle, he said. [The World's Weirdest Weather]

An ocean gauge

When looking at how water cycles through the environment - falling as rain or snow, then evaporating, then eventually cycling back as precipitation - it makes sense to look at the oceans. They occupy 71 percent of the planet's surface, and an even larger share of evaporation and precipitation takes place over them.

"The oceans are where all of the action is happening," Durack said.

The ocean surface's salinity, or salt content, increases with evaporation and decreases when more rain falls into the water, serving as a sort of gauge for large-scale patterns. These changes don't last forever; over long periods, ocean circulation driven by winds and large-scale currents redistributes the salt.

For more than a century, scientists have been recording ocean salinity, which is measured by looking at water's ability to conduct electricity. Since salt is composed of charged atoms, called ions, its presence enhances electrical conductance.

In the last decade, a network of floating sensors, called Argo, that collect data from different depths has greatly increased the information available to scientists. Research ships also continue to contribute measurements, according to Durack.

Computer models that make climate-change projections produce more conservative estimates of shifts in the water cycle than those observed, but the models appear to be correctly capturing the nature of the changes, Durack said.

A question of scale

The team's analysis reveals changes over a large geographic scale over the oceans; they expect to see similar changes over the continents. On a smaller scale, however, these changes are expected to become much more complex.

"What is the more interesting question is how regionally those changes will happen," Durack said. "No one actually experiences global mean rainfall; what we experience is our own regional change in rainfall."

The research conducted by scientists at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California appears in the April 27 issue of the journal Science.

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Wynne Parry on Twitter @Wynne_Parry. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

50 Amazing Facts About Earth
The Reality of Climate Change: 10 Myths Busted
The World's Biggest Oceans and Seas

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved.

 

  

River of beauty
River watch
Mark Renz photo art

 

  

 

  

     

 

chameleon, crab, spider
Chameleon? Crab? Spider?
Goldenrod crab spider - changes color
Mark Renz photo art

     

 

     

 

     

 

 

 

     

 

 

  

Green movement
New Green Movement
Mark Renz photo

 

 

 

 

Everglades HUB - lots of news and background info 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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