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Title: Coastal Uplands - Inland Migration and Protection
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Comments: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P STYLE="text-indent:20;margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN><SPAN>These data show the potential for Coastal Uplands in Florida to migrate inland with Sea Level Rise (SLR) up to 1-meter. Protected areas within a 300-meter buffer were assessed to evaluate potential areas available for inland migration. These data represent an initial estimation of potential availability for habitat migration; additional, more refined investigations that include additional variables would be required to determine areas of high and low potential and onsite planning. These analyses were created as part of the Landscape Conservation Project for the state of Florida.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P STYLE="text-indent:20;margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN><SPAN>Coastal Inland migration is an ecological indicator for the coastal uplands conservation asset of the Florida Landscape Conservation Project (LCP). The LCP entails a large-scale assessment of and planning for the health of important natural resources, known as conservation assets (CAs). The project provides a framework for safeguarding functional ecosystems and their interconnected processes required for maintaining healthy resources. Spatially-explicit data from the project, such as these, also inform coordination and prioritization among practitioners and stakeholders for optimizing conservation decisions. A suite of ecological indicators for each CA was carefully selected to represent important characteristics. Indicators offer metrics that serve to guide conservation activities, with clear measures of both needs and management effectiveness while providing the means to evaluate current status and monitor trends. Indicator results are shared routinely on the Florida Conservation Planning Atlas website (</SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://www.floridacpa.com"><SPAN><SPAN>www.floridacpa.com</SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>) and periodically in a summary report card that will be available for managers and the wider public.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P STYLE="text-indent:20;margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN><SPAN>The SLR was acquired from the National Hydrologic Dataset developed by USGS. Bathymetry and topography data were used to delineate the inland extent of sea with a 1-meter SLR. These data are available as a 30m x 30m raster data. For these analyses, raster data were converted to polygon data for creation of the 300-m buffer.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P STYLE="text-indent:20;margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN><SPAN>The 300-meter buffer was applied to the 1-meter SLR polygon to determine inland areas available for Coastal Uplands to migrate above rising waters. Seaward and other low areas were eliminated from the buffer using marine and estuarine landcovers from the Cooperative Land Cover Dataset (CLC 3.3) to remove areas that would not be suitable for upland migration. Remaining portions of the buffer are presumed available as potential future habitat.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P STYLE="text-indent:20;margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN><SPAN>Areas that are in protection are more likely to be available into the future, and so lands within the buffer were evaluated for present protection status using data curated by the Florida Natural Area Inventory (FNAI). FNAI maintains these data with quarterly updates as necessary. The data depict all conservation areas in Florida with the exception of some easements that are excluded because of privacy issues. Conservation lands as of August 2019 were used to identify protected areas within the 300-meter buffer.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Subject: These data show the potential for Coastal Uplands in Florida to migrate inland with Sea Level Rise (SLR) up to 1-meter. Protected areas within a 300-meter buffer were assessed to evaluate potential areas available for inland migration. These data represent an initial estimation of potential availability for habitat migration; additional, more refined investigations that include additional variables would be required to determine areas of high and low potential and onsite planning. These analyses were created as part of the Landscape Conservation Project for the state of Florida.
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Keywords: Florida, Coastal Uplands, Habitat Migration, Sea Level Rise, Conservation Areas, Landscape Conservation
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