%0 Report %D 2023 %T Baylands Resilience Framework for San Francisco Bay: Wildlife Support %A Plane, E. %A Lowe, J. %A Miller, G. %A A. Robinson %A Crain, C. %A Grenier, L. %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %G eng %0 Report %D 2023 %T Growing Resilience: Recommendations for Dune Management at North Ocean Beach %A SFEI %A ESA %A Peter Baye %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %G eng %0 Report %D 2023 %T Nature-based Solutions for Nutrient Removal %A SFEI %G eng %0 Report %D 2023 %T Petaluma River Baylands Strategy %A Sonoma Land Trust and partners %I Prepared by San Francisco Estuary Institute, Sonoma Land Trust, Point Blue Conservation Science, Ducks Unlimited, and Sonoma Resource Conservation District. Funded by the Wildlife Conservation Board. %G eng %0 Report %D 2023 %T Where creeks meet baylands: Opportunities to re-establish freshwater and sediment delivery to the baylands of San Francisco Bay %A SFEI %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %G eng %0 Report %D 2022 %T Adaptation Pathways: San Leandro Operational Landscape Unit %A Ellen Plane %A Jeremy Lowe %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %8 05/2022 %G eng %0 Report %D 2022 %T Adaptation Planning for the Bay Point Operational Landscape Unit %A Katie McKnight %A Ellen Plane %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %8 04/2022 %G eng %0 Report %D 2022 %T Shallow Groundwater Response to Sea-Level Rise: Alameda, Marin, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties %A May, C.L. %A Mohan, A. %A Plane, E. %A Ramirez-Lopez, D. %A Mak, M. %A Luchinsky, L. %A Hale, T. %A Hill, K. %X

The response of shallow groundwater to sea-level rise is a relatively new field of study. For low-lying coastal communities, sea-level rise adaptation efforts must consider the potential for groundwater rise to avoid maladaptation. The need to better understand this slow and chronic threat was identified as a critical data gap in the San Francisco Bay Area’s (Bay Area’s) adaptation efforts during the Bay Area Groundwater and Sea-Level Rise Workshop in 2019.

Pathways Climate Institute LLC (Pathways) and the San Francisco Estuary Institute (SFEI) gathered and analyzed multiple data sets and collaborated with city and county partners to analyze and map the existing “highest annual” shallow groundwater table and its likely response to future sea-level rise. This effort covers four counties (Alameda, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo) and was funded by the Bay Area Council’s California Resilience Challenge. The study focused on the San Francisco Bay side of each county and does not include the Pacific coastline of Marin, San Francisco, nor San Mateo Counties. An advisory committee composed of city and county representatives provided essential support by gathering data and reviewing depth-to-groundwater maps. Additional academic and agency advisors participated in project team meetings and informed project direction. This effort produced the following publicly available data and online tools to support adaptation efforts:

%I Pathways Climate Institute and San Francisco Estuary Institute %G eng %R http://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.16973.72164 %0 Report %D 2021 %T Ecotone levees and wildlife connectivity: A technical update to the Adaptation Atlas %A SFEI %I San Francisco Estuary Institute %C Richmond, CA %G eng %0 Report %D 2021 %T Guidance for Restoration of Natural and Nature-Based Features in the Wetland-Upland Transition Zone %A Jeremy Lowe %A Ellen Plane %A Julie Gonzalez %A Micha Salomon %I San Francisco Estuary Institute, California State Coastal Conservancy %C Richmond, CA %G eng %0 Report %D 2021 %T Sunnyvale Shoreline Resilience Vision: 2021 Executive Summary %G eng %0 Report %D 2020 %T Conceptual Designs for Marsh-Fringing Beach Nourishment to Reduce Wave Erosion of Muzzi Marsh, Corte Madera Ecological Reserve, Marin County, California %A Peter Baye %G eng %0 Report %D 2020 %T Conceptual Designs for Sea Level Rise Adaptation: Greenwood and Brunini Beaches, Tiburon, Richardson Bay, Marin County, California %A Peter Baye %G eng %0 Report %D 2020 %T New Life for Eroding Shorelines: Beach and Marsh Edge Change in the San Francisco Estuary %A SFEI %A Peter Baye %G eng %0 Report %D 2020 %T Sonoma Creek Baylands Strategy %A Sonoma Land Trust and partners %I Prepared by Sonoma Land Trust, San Francisco Estuary Institute, Point Blue Conservation Science, Environmental Science Associates, Ducks Unlimited, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service %G eng