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Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states

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Warnell, K; Currin, C; Olander, L
June 22, 2022

Coastal habitats’ ability to store carbon makes them valuable assets in state and community efforts to support climate mitigation, but sea level rise (SLR) poses a major threat to these habitats and the carbon they store. The Nicholas Institute collaborated with six eastern seaboard states (North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and New York) to develop a spatial model for predicting habitat and carbon changes due to SLR. These data provide results for each state using state-specific model parameters requested by state partners. A regional scale version of this work that uses consistent model parameters across all states is available in: http://doi.org/10.7924/r4cr5zc7v

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Publication Date

June 22, 2022
 

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Warnell, K., Currin, C., & Olander, L. (2022). Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states. https://doi.org/10.7924/r4hq43669
Warnell, Katie, Carolyn Currin, and Lydia Olander. “Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states,” June 22, 2022. https://doi.org/10.7924/r4hq43669.
Warnell K, Currin C, Olander L. Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states. 2022.
Warnell, Katie, et al. Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states. 22 June 2022. Manual, doi:10.7924/r4hq43669.
Warnell K, Currin C, Olander L. Data from: Blue carbon mapping for six mid-Atlantic states. 2022.

DOI

Publication Date

June 22, 2022