Coastal Resilience Summary
Kicked off at the Obtawaing Biosphere annual meeting on October 11, 2023, the Coastal Resilience Plan seeks to support communities along the Great Lakes shoreline in creating manageable and science informed plans for the conservation of healthy coasts. In this endeavor, the initiative prioritizes the recognition of interconnections among natural systems, human livelihoods, and diverse cultures through publications, public engagement programs, and various media platforms and the creation forums for collaboration and information sharing across the Great Lakes region. Many habitats and organisms are under threat, and a coordinated, regional, landscape-level approach will optimize opportunities for conservation and restoration.
This project, in partnership with Great Lakes Commission and Axiom Data Science and funded by the Fish and Wildlife Foundation Coastal Program, aims to bolster high-level plans through local knowledge and priorities, and elevate site-level planning to the landscape level where it can address the ecological needs sedentary and migratory animal populations and coastal hazards. Specifically, the Coastal Resilience initiative will address the need for improved coordination and cross-partner collaboration among regional partners and stakeholders, the incorporation of tribal perspectives and priorities into regional planning, and the identification and prioritization of large-scale, high-impact restoration projects in the region.
The Great Lakes region contains approximately 1,700 miles of shoreline, including 577 islands providing habitat for numerous state and federally listed threatened and endangered species, including important breeding and migratory habitat. The impacts of climate change will manifest uniquely in this region, compounding the threat with increased development pressure. Applying best practices and local knowledge through a bioregional approach will be necessary to understand and address impacts from climate change and urban development. Although plans and prioritization tools exist for larger and smaller landscape scales, there is a significant gap in planning and coordination at the Great Lakes basin-level.
Photo by Huron Pines