BOOKSHELF: State of the Estuary report; 2019: Pulse of the Bay; Multi-benefit projects

Estuary Report Provides Report Card on Bay and Delta Health

Major findings highlight vulnerabilities to sea-level rise

From the San Francisco Estuary Partnership:

Resiliency is the key issue highlighted in the State of the Estuary Report issued Monday by the San Francisco Estuary Partnership.

This is the first report on the health of the San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary since 2015. It’s being issued as the two-day, 14th biennial State of the San Francisco Estuary Conference gets underway at the Scottish Rite Center in Oakland. The report can be found at www.sfestuary.org/our-estuary/soter.  A video on the report is here.

Highlights include:

Resilience and Vulnerability. For the first time, this report looks at measures of landscape and community resilience across the estuary, including a new map depicting the following findings:

  • The estuary has enormous vulnerabilities in terms of lands at and below sea level that are protected by berms and levees.
  • The estuary shore’s resilience to increased flooding risk varies widely, from fully developed and engineered shorelines to fully nature-based wetland shores.

“Our region is getting hotter, more fire prone, and more susceptible to flooding, as well as less livable for many,” said Caitlin Sweeney, executive director of the San Francisco Estuary Partnership. “These new indicators help us assess our resilience to these new challenges and new extremes.”

The report also notes the human health benefits of access to green space and nature. Residents of disadvantaged communities, on average, have less park space per person within a half-mile walk from their homes, compared to the rest of the population in the Bay-Delta region.

“We need more investment in creative ways to use and restore flows for environmental health, to expand and build resilient shorelines by raising land elevations, and to weave considerations of social equity more strongly into efforts to improve environmental health,” said J. Letitia Grenier of the San Francisco Estuary Institute, the report’s lead scientist.

Fish Communities. The report finds that fish communities in the San Francisco Bay are slowly declining, despite being in generally good condition. This is the first time this trend has been detectable in the Bay and appears to be a slow, long-term decline that began in the 1980s. This finding is based on data from off-shore monitoring and may not reflect benefits to fish from wetland restoration at the edges of the Bay. In contrast, native fish populations in Suisun Marsh and the Delta have been declining for some time, though the proportion of native fish in the Suisun Marsh has improved over the last five years.

Urban Water Conservation. Urban areas in the Bay Area and Delta met and exceeded mandated conservation measures during the drought.  Post-drought, the conservation largely has continued. This finding shows that people in our region change their behaviors in response to environmental issues. Per-capita water use in the San Francisco Bay Area declined by 27 percent over the 32-year evaluation period, while per-capita water use in the Delta and Suisun region declined by 31 percent over a 13-year evaluation period.

“It is our residents, teachers, students, business owners and local communities who will really decide the Estuary’s health by becoming part of the solution, as we have shown in the report,” Sweeney said.

San Francisco Bay is the largest estuary — about 400,000 acres — on the Pacific Coast, and it is widely recognized as one of North America’s most ecologically important estuaries. It accounts for 77% of California’s remaining wetlands, providing key habitat for a broad suite of flora and fauna — over 1,000 species of animals, including wintering shorebirds and other native and conservation status species.

The Estuary Partnership is an ABAG program staffed by MTC working to increase the health and resiliency of the San Francisco Estuary. For more information about the San Francisco Estuary Partnership visit: sfestuary.org.

2019: Pulse of the Bay

From the San Francisco Estuary Institute:

The 2019 Pulse of the Bay is now available for download from the RMP Pulse webpage.

The theme this year is “Pollutant Pathways”, with feature articles on the four major pathways by which pollutants enter the Bay: municipal wastewater, industrial wastewater, stormwater, and dredging and dredged sediment disposal.  Each article provides a basic introduction to the pathway and discusses the regulatory framework, recent findings, and future challenges.  The articles were written collaboratively with contributions from Water Board staff, discharges, and SFEI staff.  As always, the intent was to provide a valuable reference on the theme we selected.

Also as always, the report includes some of the latest highlights from monitoring of important Bay pollutants such as nutrients, emerging contaminants, mercury, PCBs, and selenium.

I hope you find the report to be informative and useful.  Feedback and ideas for future Pulses are most welcome.

Click here to download the Pulse of the Bay.

A Multi-Benefit Approach to Water Management

From the Pacific Institute:

New Landing Page: Resources for Advancing Multi-Benefit Water Solutions

In collaboration with our project partners, the Pacific Institute is developing a framework for incorporating multiple benefits and trade-offs into water management decisions. Now the framework and multi-benefit resources have a new home on our website. The site includes an overview of the multi-benefit framework, examples for applying the framework, and resources for incorporating multiple benefits into your own work.

View the new landing page here.

 

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