Ecosystem News and Info Tracker - US
In the United States this week, ecosystem news is dominated by efforts to restore and protect landscapes facing mounting climate pressure. In Washington state, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports new riparian restoration projects along the Yakima and Columbia river tributaries, where native willows and cottonwoods are being planted to cool streams and support salmon runs that have been stressed by record low snowpack and warmer water temperatures. On the Gulf Coast, according to the Environmental Defense Fund, coastal wetland restoration in Louisiana is accelerating under new federal funding, with sediment diversion projects near the Mississippi River designed to rebuild marshes that buffer New Orleans and surrounding parishes from storm surge and sea level rise. Urban ecosystems are also in focus. City planners in Phoenix and Los Angeles are expanding tree canopy and green roof initiatives after new heat mapping data showed that low income neighborhoods face significantly higher temperatures than wealthier areas. Researchers at Duke University, who are participating in the National Conference on Ecosystem Restoration in Florida, note that such nature based solutions can reduce urban heat, cut energy use, and provide habitat for pollinators whose decline has raised alarms for U.S. agriculture. Forest and wildlife news is mixed. The U.S. Forest Service has warned of heightened wildfire risk in parts of California and the interior West due to a dry spring, even as prescribed burns and mechanical thinning continue to restore more natural fire regimes in long suppressed forests. Meanwhile, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is promoting events across national wildlife refuges that highlight prairie and wetland restoration in the Midwest, where reintroduced native grasses and seasonal wetlands support migratory waterfowl and help store carbon in soils. Globally, Earth Dot Org reports that protests in Albania are challenging construction of a luxury resort in protected coastal wetlands, underscoring growing public concern about the loss of critical habitats. New international analyses of coral reef resilience, cited by Earth Dot Org, identify tens of thousands of square kilometers of reefs that may better withstand warming oceans, guiding governments and conservation groups as they prioritize marine protected areas from the Caribbean to the Pacific. Taken together, these stories reveal an emerging pattern. From river corridors in the American West, to coastal marshes on the Gulf, to urban heat islands and international coral sanctuaries, policymakers and communities are increasingly betting on ecosystem restoration not only to protect biodiversity, but to safeguard people from heat, floods, storms, and sea level rise. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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