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Habitat inventories offer new perspective on North Carolina’s coast
A feature story in Coastal Review Online -- a news service covering the North Carolina coastline -- highlights a recently completed project to inventory modifications to beach and tidal inlet habitats from Maine to North Carolina that is providing new information to managers in the coastal zone.
Located in News & Events / All News Items
The Maine Sea Grant College Program = Research funding opportunities.
The Maine Sea Grant College Program is accepting preliminary proposals for research projects to be funded in the period February 2018 through January 2020.
Located in Opportunities / Funding
Project Identifying Resilient Sites for Coastal Conservation
Sea levels are expected to rise by one to six feet over the next century, and coastal sites vary markedly in their ability to accommodate such inundation. In response to this threat, scientists from The Nature Conservancy evaluated 10,736 sites in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic for the size, configuration and adequacy of their migration space, and for the natural processes necessary to support the migration of coastal habitats in response to sea-level rise.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects / TNCCoastal_Resilient Sites
File Octet Stream Great Marsh Resiliency Workshop Agenda
Meeting agenda with links to presentations
Located in Topics / / Workshops / Great Marsh Resiliency Workshop
Changing trophic structure and energy dynamics in the Northwest Atlantic: implications for Atlantic salmon feeding at West Greenland
NMFS publishes new Atlantic salmon diet study in Marine Ecology Progress
Located in News and Announcements / News
File application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Rapid Assessment Protocol for Aquatic Passability of Tidally Influenced Road-Stream Crossings
There is growing interest among conservation practitioners to have a method to assess tidally influenced crossings for their potential as barriers to aquatic organism passage. Protocols designed for freshwater streams will not adequately address the passage challenges of bi-directional flow and widely variable depth and velocity of tidally influenced systems. Diadromous fish must be able to overcome the enhanced water velocities associated with tidal restrictions to reach upstream spawning habitat. This project will build on the existing North Atlantic Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative's protocol, database and scoring procedures to extend the applicability of this region-wide program to road-stream crossings in tidally influenced settings.
Located in Projects / Aquatic Connectivity
Project Troff document Atlantic and Gulf Coast Resiliency Project
Coastal change is a shared challenge along the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States, yet there are vast differences in the tools and information available in these regions. This project coordinated, synthesized, and delivered coastal resilience information, activities and lessons learned across the coastal portion of the Atlantic, Gulf and Caribbean Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) network.
Located in Projects / Multi-Ecosystem Projects
New research reveals that dam passage can leave smolts with long-lasting injuries that make them vulnerable to predators far downstream.
Located in News and Announcements / News
Acoustic telemetry movements of Altantic salmon smolts in the Penobscot River, Maine, USA.
Located in Resources / Links
File Slides-Feb/March Coastal and Marine Technical Team call
Powerpoint presentation to be given on webinar on Feb 27 2015.
Located in Teams / Coastal and Marine Technical Team / Files for Feb/March 2015 Coastal and Marine Technical Committee Call