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Data Set Info
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Child Items
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Summary

Short Citation
Office for Coastal Management, 2025: Adapting Salt Marsh Vulnerability Assessment Methodologies to Southeastern Salt Marshes - NERRS/NSC(NERRS Science Collaborative), https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/inport/item/76705.
Full Citation Examples

Abstract

The Project

Home to roughly one third of the Southeast's estuarine salt marsh acreage, South Carolina faces escalating local and state concerns over marsh vulnerability due to rising sea levels. In 2021, the ACE Basin and North Inlet – Winyah Bay (NI-WB) NERRs used capacity building funds to convene a community of managers, regulators, and scientists interested in identifying appropriate methods to assess salt marsh health in South Carolina. As part of this effort, participants expressed interest in exploring appropriate marsh vulnerability metrics – and the associated thresholds that inform decision making – as a possible first step toward understanding the impacts of increasing rates of sea level rise on marshes and developing appropriate restoration strategies.

While a variety of marsh vulnerability metrics have been developed nationally, their direct applicability to Southeastern marshes posed a knowledge gap, potentially due to the sparse vegetation densities that are common across the region. Knowing that several informative metrics could be derived from remotely sensed data, the team’s approach utilized satellite and aerial imagery, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and in situ observation to assess existing marsh vulnerability metrics at multiple spatial scales at the two South Carolina reserves. In exploring the applicability of the existing metrics and thresholds, the team found that the unique nature of South Carolina’s salt marshes – largely Spartina alterniflora monocultures that vary spatially and temporally in terms of how sparsely vegetated or covered in water they are – result in higher Unvegetated to Vegetated Ratio (UVVR) thresholds, variability in Marsh Resilience to SLR (MARS), and variability in Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) calculations. These findings have major implications for marsh management recommendations as decision makers use these metrics to estimate whether marshes are keeping pace with rates of sea level rise. In particular, the imagery and analyses produced through this project have demonstrated the unique nature of southeastern salt marshes which needs to be considered when evaluating South Carolina marshes.

Purpose

The Impact

Identified inconsistencies among the various vulnerability metrics the team explored and set the stage for future research to better understand how and why these metrics vary, and whether there are appropriate thresholds for the region.

Created new and strengthened existing collaborations between the South Carolina NERRs and regional intended users.

Enhanced potential to support local communities’ decision making and management of salt marshes in the face of increased vulnerability resulting from sea level rise.

Distribution Information

Access Constraints:

None

Use Constraints:

Cite this dataset when used as a source: NOAA retains the right to analyze, synthesize and publish summaries of the NERRS/NSC data. The NERRS/NSC retains the right to be fully credited for having collected and process the data. Following academic courtesy standards, the NERR site where the data were collected should be contacted and fully acknowledged in any subsequent publications in which any part of the data are used. The data enclosed within this package/transmission are only as accurate as the quality assurance and quality control procedures that are described in the associated metadata reporting statement allow. The user bears all responsibility for its subsequent use/misuse in any further analyses or comparisons. The Federal government does not assume liability to the Recipient or third persons, nor will the Federal government reimburse or indemnify the Recipient for its liability due to any losses resulting in any way from the use of this data. Requested citation format: NOAA National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS) Science Collaborative(NSC).

Controlled Theme Keywords

SALT MARSH

URLs

Child Items

Type Title
Entity N/A

Contact Information

Metadata Contact
Jeremy Cothran
jeremy.cothran@gmail.com

Extents

Geographic Area 1

-79.201798° W, -79.189179° E, 33.351292° N, 33.336296° S

North Inlet-Winyah Bay NERR Wetlands and Water Levels(WWL) monitoring site - Georgetown, SC

Geographic Area 2

-80.3299° W, -80.320638° E, 32.507265° N, 32.498227° S

ACE NERRs Wetlands and Water Levels (WWL) monitoring site - Edisto Island, SC

Time Frame 1
2023-10 - 2024-09

Item Identification

Title: Adapting Salt Marsh Vulnerability Assessment Methodologies to Southeastern Salt Marshes - NERRS/NSC(NERRS Science Collaborative)
Status: Completed
Publication Date: 2024-09
Abstract:

The Project

Home to roughly one third of the Southeast's estuarine salt marsh acreage, South Carolina faces escalating local and state concerns over marsh vulnerability due to rising sea levels. In 2021, the ACE Basin and North Inlet – Winyah Bay (NI-WB) NERRs used capacity building funds to convene a community of managers, regulators, and scientists interested in identifying appropriate methods to assess salt marsh health in South Carolina. As part of this effort, participants expressed interest in exploring appropriate marsh vulnerability metrics – and the associated thresholds that inform decision making – as a possible first step toward understanding the impacts of increasing rates of sea level rise on marshes and developing appropriate restoration strategies.

While a variety of marsh vulnerability metrics have been developed nationally, their direct applicability to Southeastern marshes posed a knowledge gap, potentially due to the sparse vegetation densities that are common across the region. Knowing that several informative metrics could be derived from remotely sensed data, the team’s approach utilized satellite and aerial imagery, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and in situ observation to assess existing marsh vulnerability metrics at multiple spatial scales at the two South Carolina reserves. In exploring the applicability of the existing metrics and thresholds, the team found that the unique nature of South Carolina’s salt marshes – largely Spartina alterniflora monocultures that vary spatially and temporally in terms of how sparsely vegetated or covered in water they are – result in higher Unvegetated to Vegetated Ratio (UVVR) thresholds, variability in Marsh Resilience to SLR (MARS), and variability in Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) calculations. These findings have major implications for marsh management recommendations as decision makers use these metrics to estimate whether marshes are keeping pace with rates of sea level rise. In particular, the imagery and analyses produced through this project have demonstrated the unique nature of southeastern salt marshes which needs to be considered when evaluating South Carolina marshes.

Purpose:

The Impact

Identified inconsistencies among the various vulnerability metrics the team explored and set the stage for future research to better understand how and why these metrics vary, and whether there are appropriate thresholds for the region.

Created new and strengthened existing collaborations between the South Carolina NERRs and regional intended users.

Enhanced potential to support local communities’ decision making and management of salt marshes in the face of increased vulnerability resulting from sea level rise.

Supplemental Information:

Project Lead:

Denise Sanger, ACE NERR, sangerd@dnr.sc.gov

Collaborative Lead:

Pamela Marcum, South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, marcump@dnr.sc.gov

Technical Lead:

Erik Smith, North Inlet-Winyah Bay NERR, erik@baruch.sc.edu

Partners:

ACE Basin National Estuarine Research Reserve; ACE Basin National Estuarine Research Reserve; South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > ECOSYSTEMS > MARINE ECOSYSTEMS > COASTAL > SALT MARSH
UNCONTROLLED
None habitat mapping
None habitat restoration
None remote sensing
None salt marsh

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None ACE Basin NERR, SC
None North Inlet-Winyah Bay NERR, SC

Data Set Information

Data Set Scope Code: Data Set
Maintenance Frequency: As Needed
Distribution Liability:

The distributor does not assume liability.

Support Roles

Data Steward

CC ID: 1403555
Date Effective From: 2015
Date Effective To:
Contact (Organization): Office for Coastal Management (OCM)
Address: 2234 South Hobson Avenue
Charleston, SC 29405-2413
URL: https://www.coast.noaa.gov/

Distributor

CC ID: 1403556
Date Effective From: 2015
Date Effective To:
Contact (Organization): Office for Coastal Management (OCM)
Address: 2234 South Hobson Avenue
Charleston, SC 29405-2413
URL: https://www.coast.noaa.gov/

Metadata Contact

CC ID: 1403553
Date Effective From: 2017-10-31
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Cothran, Jeremy
Email Address: jeremy.cothran@gmail.com
View Historical Support Roles

Extents

Currentness Reference: Ground Condition

Extent Group 1

Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 1

CC ID: 1403572
W° Bound: -79.201798
E° Bound: -79.189179
N° Bound: 33.351292
S° Bound: 33.336296
Description

North Inlet-Winyah Bay NERR Wetlands and Water Levels(WWL) monitoring site - Georgetown, SC

Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 2

CC ID: 1403567
W° Bound: -80.3299
E° Bound: -80.320638
N° Bound: 32.507265
S° Bound: 32.498227
Description

ACE NERRs Wetlands and Water Levels (WWL) monitoring site - Edisto Island, SC

Extent Group 1 / Time Frame 1

CC ID: 1403566
Time Frame Type: Range
Start: 2023-10
End: 2024-09

Access Information

Security Class: Unclassified
Data Access Constraints:

None

Data Use Constraints:

Cite this dataset when used as a source: NOAA retains the right to analyze, synthesize and publish summaries of the NERRS/NSC data. The NERRS/NSC retains the right to be fully credited for having collected and process the data. Following academic courtesy standards, the NERR site where the data were collected should be contacted and fully acknowledged in any subsequent publications in which any part of the data are used. The data enclosed within this package/transmission are only as accurate as the quality assurance and quality control procedures that are described in the associated metadata reporting statement allow. The user bears all responsibility for its subsequent use/misuse in any further analyses or comparisons. The Federal government does not assume liability to the Recipient or third persons, nor will the Federal government reimburse or indemnify the Recipient for its liability due to any losses resulting in any way from the use of this data. Requested citation format: NOAA National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS) Science Collaborative(NSC).

Distribution Information

Distribution 1

CC ID: 1403557
Download URL: http://www.nerrssciencecollaborative.org/project/Ralston16
Distributor: Office for Coastal Management (OCM) (2015 - Present)
File Name: Ralston16
File Type (Deprecated): Multiple formats

URLs

URL 1

CC ID: 1403560
URL: https://nerrssciencecollaborative.org/project/Sanger23
Name: Sanger23
URL Type:
Online Resource

Data Quality

Representativeness:

N/A

Quality Control Procedures Employed:

This information is detailed within the project links.

Lineage

Lineage Statement:

This information is detailed within the project links.

Sources

N/A

CC ID: 1403563

Process Steps

Process Step 1

CC ID: 1403564
Description:

N/A

Process Contact: Office for Coastal Management (OCM)

Child Items

Rubric scores updated every 15m

Rubric Score Type Title
Entity N/A

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 76705
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:76705
Metadata Record Created By: Jeremy Cothran
Metadata Record Created: 2025-07-18 19:17+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: Jeremy Cothran
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2025-07-18 20:11+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2025-07-18
Owner Org: OCM
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2019-11-08
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2020-11-08