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Friday, December 20, 2013

Planning ahead to preserve Rhode Island’s Coast

CRMC Announces SLAMM Study Participation, Sea-Level Rise Planning

Succotash Salt Marsh, East Matunuck, RI
(photo credit Tracey C. O’Neill)
Narragansett - The University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography Coastal Resources Center was the site of the most recent gathering of the Rhode Island Beach SAMP, drawing a full auditorium of coastal environmentalists, students and residents concerned with continuing changes to the states shoreline.

The December 9 meeting of the Rhode Island Shoreline Change Special Area Management Plan (Beach SAMP), focused on the issue of seawalls and man-made coastal armoring, unveiled Rhode Island’s pending participation in a federal Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS)sea-level rise planning program for wetlands.



“We have a problem here in RI with our current wetlands. A lot of them are drowning in place,” said Grover Fugate, Executive Director CRMC, announcing the program. “[We] are engaged with a project with Federal FWS to see if we can’t bring sediment in and spray it onto the marsh to raise the elevation of the marshes to keep up with that.”

Dubbed SLAMM, the Sea-Level Affecting Marshes Model, developed and managed by FWS for its National Wildlife Refuge system, began in 1988 and evolved over time. According to FWS, in cooperation with the Division of Natural Resources and Conservation Planning (NRCS), SLAMM modeling identifies a specific habitat via digitized mapping and then applies several different sea-level rise scenarios.

To read the rest of Tracey's December 9 CRMC coverage, click here.