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Water Forecast: What South-Central U.S. Natural Resource Managers Should Expect in the Coming Years

Water Forecast: What South-Central U.S. Natural Resource Managers Should Expect in the Coming Years. August 7, 2012. Steven McNulty, Ph.D. Research Ecologist USDA Forest Service EFETAC Raleigh, NC Steve_mcnulty@ncsu.edu. Take Home Point # 1.

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Water Forecast: What South-Central U.S. Natural Resource Managers Should Expect in the Coming Years

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  1. Water Forecast: What South-Central U.S. Natural Resource Managers Should Expect in the Coming Years August 7, 2012 Steven McNulty, Ph.D. Research Ecologist USDA Forest Service EFETAC Raleigh, NC Steve_mcnulty@ncsu.edu

  2. Take Home Point # 1 Drought and Wet Periods are Cyclical

  3. 400 Year Record Cook and Krusic NA Drought Atlas

  4. Take Home Point # 2 The Cycle is becoming more extreme

  5. Cook and Krusic NA Drought Atlas 200 Year Record

  6. Take Home Point # 3 Some parts of the cycle are not expected to shift

  7. Dallas Projected precipitation through 21st Century

  8. Take Home Point # 4 Some parts of the cycle are expected to shift

  9. Dallas projected air through 21st Century Shameless plug alert #1

  10. USDA Forest Service – Threat Assessment CentersSteve McNulty (PI) Emrys Treasure Lisa Jennings Jennifer Moore Myers Robert Herring Nancy Grulke Lisa Balduman USDA Forest Service – Southern RegionChris Liggett (PI) David Meriwether Paul Arndt

  11. So what does this mean for water management?

  12. Changes in Forest Water Yield

  13. Current annual water flow

  14. Change in flow due to climate change by 2050

  15. Change in flow due to increased use by 2050

  16. Change in annual flow due to increased impervious surface by 2050 Shameless plug alert # 2

  17. Rangeland and forest management strategy for adapting water stress Favor more drought, and fire tolerance species such long-leaf pine over more fire susceptible species such loblolly pine. Decrease stand stocking level to reduce drought and insect impacts Shorten rotation length to minimize the potential for disturbance caused forest volume loss As stress progresses shift to grassland management

  18. Increases in soil erosion and Stream sedimentation due to increased energy/water holding capacity of the atmosphere leading to more intense rain events

  19. Percent of the continental USA with a much above normal proportion of total annual precipitation from 1-day extreme events (more than 2 inches or 50.8mm) BW 7 Karl et al. 1996

  20. Increased soil erosion risk and stream sedimentation Uwharrie National Forest

  21. Areas of Soil Erosion By 2030 On UNF

  22. Management Strategy for Coping with Increased Soil Erosion Continue to encourage standard soil erosion control practices such as buffer strips, broad based dips, piling slash down slope of skid trails and along stream channels Relocate trails away from streams Use bridge mats and culverts at stream crossings

  23. Increased air temperature and little change in annual precipitation will result is less stream flow and surface water

  24. Playa lakes in west Texas fill up after a heavy spring rain.

  25. Increased soil erosion and reduced available water will likely cause a reduction in Playas

  26. Increased soil erosion and decreased overall spring rains will likely lead to reduction in prairie potholes, and resting sites for water fowl - Monitor for new sources of sedimentation (from areas that historically have not been points of erosion). - Use traditional BMP’s and remediation practices to address these problem areas - Continue to work with other interest groups (e.g. Duck Unlimited) to conserve remaining habitat and examine Opportunities to new habitat creation with shifting climate patterns

  27. Increased Hurricane Occurrence and Severity Naturally cyclical, and the southern US is headed into a natural increase in hurricane activity

  28. Hurricanes per Year

  29. Increased Hurricane Occurrence and Severity Naturally cyclical, and the southern US is headed into a natural increase in hurricane activity Ocean water temperatures are rising

  30. Warming waters provide more energy for storms

  31. Management Strategy for Coping with Increased Hurricane Activity and Intensity Plant or encourage regeneration of more wind resistant long-leaf pine over Loblolly pine Look to establish ready markets for salvaged wood (less than 10% is currently recovered) to reduce increase insect and fire outbreaks associated with increased debris volume Consider shortening the rotation length to minimize the potential for catastrophic loss due to hurricanes

  32. Coastal Flooding and Sea Level Rise

  33. Glacial Melting and thermal expansion of ocean water will cause sea levels to rise

  34. Management Options to Slow Coastal Loss Encourage Mangrove and other coast vegetation that will buffer the shoreline from extreme wave events Maintain coastal marsh, and barrier island areas

  35. Water Talk “Conclusion” Fred Krupp: A New Climate-Change Consensus It's time for conservatives to compete with liberals to devise the best, most cost-effective climate change solution Respected Republican leaders like Govs. John Kasich of Ohio and Chris Christie of New Jersey have spoken out about the reality of climate change. Rupert Murdoch's recent tweet—"Climate change very slow but real. So far all cures worse than disease."—may reflect an emerging conservative view. Even Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson, during public comments in June, conceded the reality of climate change while offering assurances that "there will be an engineering solution" and "we'll adapt." WSJ August 6, 2012

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