Introduction Section I – Integrated Science Directions for fy 2005



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Chesapeake Bay


The ecosystem of the Chesapeake Bay, the Nation's largest estuary, has been in decline due to poor water quality, loss of habitat, and over harvesting. These conditions have adversely affected DOI trust resources including interjurisdictional fisheries, migratory water birds, and their associated habitats. The Chesapeake Bay Program (CBP), which includes the states in the Bay watershed and the Federal Government (including three DOI Bureaus), developed Chesapeake 2000, which is a 10-year plan for restoration of the Bay and its watershed. To support the expanded technical needs of Chesapeake 2000, the USGS began in 2001 to carry out a 5-year science plan that coordinates studies, carried out through multiple USGS Programs and science teams, to provide unbiased scientific information to understand, protect, and restore the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed. The studies provide information on the ecosystem linkages between land-use, generation of sediment and nutrients, and the impact on water quality, habitats, and living resources in the Bay. Studies being conducted between 2001 to 2005/6 have helped the CBP formulate restoration strategies to attempt to meet the goals of Chesapeake 2000.
With the restoration strategies now being implemented, the CBP is in need of science to understand ecosystem response to population growth, management actions, and natural variability. The information is needed to help assess and adapt management strategies in 2007 in an attempt to meet restoration goals in 2010. Additionally, DOI is requesting expanded science to meet the needs of USFWS Chesapeake Bay Ecosystem Plan and the new needs associated with the NPS study to include parts of the Bay and its watershed in the NPS system.
To meet the expanded needs of DOI and the ongoing needs of the CBP, USGS Chesapeake Bay Studies in FY05 will be completing planned projects, integrating information for synthesis products, and revising its science plan to reflect projects to be conducted in 2006-2010. The CBP and DOI have requested the USGS addresses several topics including: (1) rates and forecasting of land-cover change, (2) the sources and transport of sediment, nutrients, and contaminants to the Bay, (3) determine the impact of these stresses on vital habitats in the Bay (water quality to support fisheries, submerged aquatic vegetation, tidal wetlands, and stream corridors) and (4) enhance decision-support systems for delivering information. In FY05, the USGS Chesapeake Bay studies will work with multiple USGS programs to identify potential projects that can be conducted in FY06-2010 to understand these issues to help DOI and CBP formulate, and evaluate the effectiveness of, strategies to restore the function and integrity of these vital habitats. (Contacts: Scott Phillips, Dave Russ, and Martha Garcia)


  1. Puget Sound. Concern for the health of the Puget Sound near-shore ecosystem has risen with the Endangered Species Act (ESA) listing of several species of salmon. Declining fisheries and threatened aquatic populations have been tied to the loss of critical ecosystem functions, the result of a degraded coastal habitat. Federal, state, and local government scientists and resource managers have begun working together as part of the Puget Sound Near shore Ecosystem Restoration (PSNER) Project to address the effects of urbanization on fragile coastal environments. PSNER goals are to develop recovery programs and ecosystem restoration plans that sustain life on the Sound and continue the region’s economic prosperity. The USGS partner role will be to provide scientific expertise, technology development, and information transfer to guide coastal restoration and project decisions in support of adaptive management strategies that conserve and protect the region’s unique coastal resources.

The Western Fisheries Research Center studies aquatic invasive species and the life history and disease effect on the Pacific salmon and other fish populations. These groups (Coastal and Marine Geology Program and Western Fisheries) will continue to plan and participate in integrated research in Puget Sound with emphasis on coastal transport and ecosystem processes, salmon restoration science, landscape ecology, and geologic hazard evaluations. The Coastal and Marine Geology Program intends to provide $160,000 in OE. Additional funding may be available depending on the ability/interest of the Coastal & Marine teams to meet existing objectives while redirecting staff and resources to support this new effort. Contacts: Frank Shipley and John Haines.




  1. Coastal Louisiana. Coastal subsidence, sea level rise, and fault activation related to fluid energy production are major concerns in the Gulf Coast Basin. These physical processes, along with storms and erosion, negatively impact coastal communities. Federal and state agencies in Louisiana are collaborating to develop strategies that will effectively mitigate the effects of coastal change hazards and restore disappearing wetlands and submerged habitats. Interdisciplinary efforts currently exist among the following Programs: Energy Resources (ERP), Coastal and Marine Geology (CMGP), Status and Trends of Biological Resources (Monitor and assess environmental status and trends) and Terrestrial, Freshwater and Marine Ecosystems (TFME). ERP and CMGP support research to understand fault dynamics, subsidence, and attendant changes in land characteristics related to withdrawal of petroleum resources. CMGP supports efforts to assess: natural subsidence on regional scales; the vulnerability of coastal resources to subsidence, sea level rise, and coastal storms; and regional sand resources for hazard mitigation and restoration planning. TFME and S&T programs, working with other federal and state agencies, are supporting research and monitoring to determine rates of coastal wetlands loss, sea-level rise and sediment deposition; and the vegetation biomass needed to maintain the marsh and provide excess material for marsh rebuilding. Coastal and Marine Geology and TFME interests include monitoring, mapping, and forecasting landscape change for restoration. The President's budget shows an increase in the Louisiana Coastal Area restoration effort to increase coordination and planning efforts by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers with USGS and other agencies for large-scale restoration. This increase in funds will further interagency efforts on methods development to decrease the rate of marsh degradation and on efforts to determine the rate of landscape change. Contacts: Colleen Charles, Martha Garcia and Dawn Lavoie.





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