New Study Assesses Local Coastline Vulnerability

Exceptionally high tides, such as this king tide at Butterfly Beach in Montecito in January 2019, are expected to become the norm in the coming decades (Photo: Monique Myers/Marine Science Institute)

By Katherine Leitzell, UC Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara County residents love their coastline, from the small-town beaches of Carpinteria to Santa Barbara’s waterfront to camping hotspots like Jalama Beach and dramatic Guadalupe Dunes. But drastic changes are in store in coming decades as temperatures and sea levels rise, bringing massive impacts to local ecology and human systems.

To help local coastal and land use managers prepare, a multidisciplinary team of researchers has synthesized projected changes to the Santa Barbara coast that are expected as a result of the warming climate, as well as options for adaptation. The new study is published in the journal Ocean and Coastal Management.

The paper specific to the Santa Barbara area is a joint effort between researchers at UC Santa Barbara, California Sea Grant, U.S. Geological Survey, UMass Amherst, Northeastern University and Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego.

Building on research conducted through the Santa Barbara Area Coastal Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment, which drew upon long term datasets collected by the Santa Barbara Coastal Long Term Ecological Research Program (National Science  Foundation) and was incorporated into the Fourth California Climate Change Assessment, the new study specifically examined the impacts of climate change on watersheds, coastal hazards, wetlands and sandy beach ecosystems. It also includes specific recommendations for adaptation aimed at policymakers and managers.

Local planners already contend with wave-driven erosion along the coast in places such as Isla Vista. Photo by Patrick Barnard/USGS

“What’s new about this study is its consideration of multi-faceted climate changes of physical and biological elements of the Santa Barbara coastal region,” said lead author Monique Myers, a California Sea Grant extension specialist based in Santa Barbara, with appointments at both Scripps Institution of Oceanography and at UC Santa Barbara. “Further, we identify actions that local governments can take to balance the needs of ecosystems and human populations in the face of climate change. While climate change is a global problem, there is a lot we can do at the local level to protect our communities and natural environment.”

Key impacts include: 

Temperature: The number of extremely hot days will likely double by 2050 and could increase by a factor of 10 by 2090. More frequent and intense heat waves will be detrimental to both health and ecosystems, and increase demand for water and energy for air conditioning.

Precipitation: Longer dry spells and more frequent drought will impact water supplies and increase fire vulnerability. Heavy precipitation, when it does occur, will produce floods and erosion.

Sea-level rise: More frequent and higher extreme sea levels will lead to flooding, coastal erosion and transformation and/or loss of beach and wetland ecosystems — these vulnerable and diverse coastal ecosystems could suffer great losses by 2050. The study finds that upper beach zones and high marsh habitats disappear first.

Goleta Beach after a particularly intense 2016 El Nino event. Photo by Arthur Sylvester/UCSB

An ecosystems view brings new ideas for adaptation
While climate adaptation planning often focuses on impacts to the environment people have built for themselves — homes, businesses, roads and other infrastructure — the new study shows that expanding climate adaptation planning to natural ecosystems can identify not just the impacts on these environments, but also creative solutions that could simultaneously preserve central California’s unique natural environments as well as our built communities.

“Revising current management regimes could provide new opportunities for local adaptation that conserves sandy beach ecosystems and the vital functions and services they provide to coastal communities in the face of climate change,” said UCSB researcher Jenny Dugan, also a coauthor. 

Action items for local governments
The researchers say their study highlights many opportunities for local government to make a big difference. It also could be used as a model for other communities in California and beyond as they plan for the local impacts of climate change.  

“With climate changes projected to increasingly add to existing stresses that affect the Santa Barbara coast, ongoing community adaptive measures will need to account for emerging climate drivers and emerging information,”said Scripps Institution of Oceanography researcher Dan Cayan

While the study provides a pragmatic framework of adaptation options, the researchers emphasize that taking steps to adapt cannot replace the need to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the first place. Recent reports show that neither California nor the world as a whole are yet on track to meeting greenhouse gas reduction targets, and that the next few years are critical in turning the tide. Even under optimistic mitigation scenarios, a large body of scientific evidence indicates that substantial warming, sea level rise and other climate changes are inevitable in future decades, underscoring the need for local actions. 

“We are already seeing the fingerprint of climate change in events like the Montecito fire and mudslides. If we don’t act as a society to deal with climate change swiftly, I’m afraid disasters will become more and more common,” said Myers. “The good news for our region is that Santa Barbara government agencies are acting now to plan to avert extreme climate impacts in future decades.”

The article is “A multidisciplinary coastal vulnerability assessment for local government focused on ecosystems, Santa Barbara area, California,” by Monique Myers, et. al. (DOI:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2019.104921). It appears in Ocean and Coastal Management, published by Elsevier

Copies of this paper are available to credentialed journalists upon request; please contact Elsevier’s Newsroom at newsroom@elsevier.com or +31 20 485 2719.

More research stories from the Santa Barbara Channel can be found in The Current’s featured compilation, Channel for Discovery.

news.ucsb.edu

Avatar

Written by Anonymous

What do you think?

Comments

0 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

10 Comments

  1. Why should we taxpayers have to pay $35 to read a paper funded by a public university? It would be useful (and also surprising) to see valid statistical evidence that “climate change” whatever that means, caused the debris flows in Montecito. These alluvial fans have been eroding for millennia.

  2. As though the recent/current drought, extreme hot dry weather, and Thomas fire had nothing to do with the slides. As though the increased heat content of the planet’s oceans isn’t increasing their volume causing sea level rise . As though glaciers are not disappearing and Antarctic ice cap not melting. Deny all you want, the facts are plain enough that a sixteen year(one of the few adults in the room) old can see it.

  3. Agree with 2:06 pm — this paper was done by mostly public agencies, “a joint effort between researchers at UC Santa Barbara, California Sea Grant, U.S. Geological Survey, UMass Amherst, Northeastern University and Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego” and should be available to the public, not to just “credentialed journalists” who will excerpt it.
    The City of SB was doing a study, too, complete with a committee but that’s been dead in the water and nothing released to the public, with only two meetings since January and nothing released to the public except what they may be doing …sometime. And nothing from local journalists about that silence. https://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/brdcomm/nz/slr/default.asp

  4. Look at the fire/drought/flood/ mudslide history of SB County. You will see these events have been recorded since 1886. Same fires, same floods same droughts, in the exact same places. We had no major fires for 17 years between 1990 and 2007. That was the longest reprieve ever in the county.
    The problem is not climate change it’s poor planning.

  5. For all of you crying about the paper not being available for free, you should direct your anger at the pay to publish open source system, not the researchers who work on a limited budget. It can cost >$2k to publish open source. You have 2 options here: 1) contact the author and they will always send you a pdf of the paper or 2) look for a published report with the funding agency online. In this case a more detailed report is available online. Just do a little search and you’ll find it. https://caseagrant.ucsd.edu/project/santa-barbara-area-coastal-ecosystem-vulnerability-assessment-sba-ceva

  6. 11:15 exactly. So how can we honestly say we know anything about climate change or what the future holds? Every decade a new theory or model comes out. It would be ignorant to think that human activity isn’t harming the earth, but causing it to warm to crisis level is n the next 20 years? I wish Scientists and those who think they are scientists would just admit we cannot predict what will happen in 50 years.

Coastal Cleanup Day Clears Over 5,000 Pounds of Trash

City of Ventura and SB Channelkeeper Sign Interim Settlement on Ventura River Litigation