Simulating climate change in a coastal watershed with an integrated suite of airshed, watershed, and estuary models

Author:

Linker Lewis C.1,Shenk Gary W.2ORCID,Bhatt Gopal3,Tian Richard4,Cerco Carl F.5,Bertani Isabella4

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Chesapeake Bay Program Office Annapolis Maryland USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey Virginia/West Virginia Water Science Center Richmond Virginia USA

3. Penn State University Chesapeake Bay Program Office Annapolis Maryland USA

4. University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science University of Maryland Annapolis Maryland USA

5. Attain Inc. Chesapeake Bay Program Office Annapolis Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractIn 2020, the Chesapeake Bay Program moved to offset impacts from climate change for the 30‐year period from 1995 through 2025 by having its seven watershed jurisdictions (Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia) apply additional nutrient pollutant reduction practices. The climate change assessment was performed with integrated models of the Chesapeake watershed, airshed, and estuary. Scenarios run for the years 2025, 2035, 2045, and 2055 estimated effects from the different future climatic conditions. This article presents the results of that assessment and is intended to provide a guide to assist other modeling practitioners in assessing climate change impacts in coastal watersheds. Major influences of climate change that were quantified include increases in precipitation volume, potential evapotranspiration, watershed nutrient loads, tidal water temperature, and sea level. Minor influences quantified in the climate change analysis include changes in nutrient speciation and increases in wet deposition of nitrogen, CO2, rainfall intensity, tidal wetland loss, up‐estuary salt intrusion, and phytoplankton biomass. To offset climate change impacts from 1995 to 2025 on water quality, the scenarios indicate an additional 2.3 million and 0.3 million kg of nitrogen and phosphorus per annum, respectively, will need to be reduced beyond what is called for in the Chesapeake Total Maximum Daily Load.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology,Ecology

Reference131 articles.

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2. Evaluating the joint effects of climate and land use change on runoff and pollutant loading in a rapidly developing watershed

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4. Bales Jerad andJ.C.Robbins.1999.“A Dynamic Water‐Quality Modeling Framework for the Neuse River Estuary North Carolina.”Vol. 99 No. 4017. US Department of the Interior US Geological Survey.

5. Interactions of warming and altered nutrient load timing on the phenology of oxygen dynamics in Chesapeake Bay

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