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An aerial view of a farm field affected by saltwater intrusion. Gray areas of the field are where salt damage has occurred. Somerset County, Maryland. |
Saltwater Intrusion
A Growing Threat to
Coastal Agriculture
Northeast Climate
Hub
As sea levels rise along the coasts, saltwater can move onto the land.
Known
as saltwater intrusion, this occurs when storm surges or high tides overtop
areas low in elevation.
It
also occurs when saltwater infiltrates freshwater aquifers and raises the groundwater
table below the soil surface.
In
the Northeast, the average rate of sea level rise is 3 mm per year, and faster
in the mid-Atlantic where land is also sinking.
This
rate is also speeding up, causing the problem of saltwater intrusion to get
worse over time.
Researchers
are showing that large storms are becoming more frequent, high tides are
reaching farther inland, and saltwater is spreading through fresh groundwater
faster than it has in past decades.
Droughts
can make the problem worse by decreasing the fresh water available to flush
salts out of soil and groundwater.
What issues do
farmers face?
Because
of its low elevation, land along much of the Northeast seaboard is at risk from
saltwater intrusion.
In
this region, many acres of farmland are lost every year because they are
becoming too wet and salty to grow crops.
Salt
tolerant marsh plants that border farm fields are moving inland and onto the
former fields in a process called “marsh migration.”
Though
farmers currently view marsh migration as a problem, it may also provide
opportunities.
Farmers
may be able to develop wetland conservation easements on this land.
In
this case, planting certain native plants can help prevent or slow the
migration of undesirable or invasive species such as Phragmites australis.
Native
plants can provide other valuable ecosystem services too.
Saltwater
can also impact water quality by “unlocking” nutrients from fertilizers in farm
fields.
This
is due to the unique chemistry of saltwater and how it interacts with soil.
Once
these nutrients become mobile, they can travel through networks of agricultural
ditches into larger coastal water bodies such as tidal creeks and marshes.
There,
the excess nutrients can cause excess algae growth. When the algae die, they
are broken down by bacteria.
This
process can use up all the oxygen in the water.
Depleted oxygen levels can result in fish kills, loss of animal habitat, and other harmful effects on coastal ecosystems and wildlife.
How can farmers
adapt?
There
are a few strategies that can improve soil health and lessen the effects of
saltwater intrusion in the short term.
However,
these are not long-term solutions.
Farmers
can remove excess salt from the soils through irrigation.
Natural
rainfall events will also help with this process.
Farmers
can also add gypsum to decrease excess salt in the soil and use compost and
manure products with low salt levels.
Cover
crops, which help salt to leach down through the soil by increasing the flow of
water, can also be grown on affected fields for one season.
Most
of the cash crops currently grown in the Northeast are not salt or flood
tolerant.
However,
farmers may be able to continue generating income on land impacted by saltwater
intrusion by planting different crops.
Researchers
are currently testing out varieties of barley, sorghum, salt tolerant soy,
switchgrass, and other plants to determine how well they can withstand salty
soils and periodic flooding.
They
hope to identify crops that can be planted and harvested with equipment that
farmers already have.
Another
tactic for adapting to saltwater intrusion is to add in conservation practices
on or next to salt impacted fields.
These
practices can provide wildlife habitat, protect and improve water quality, and
may become income sources too.
Native
warm season grasses such as switchgrass, coastal panicgrass, eastern gamagrass,
and salt meadow and prairie cordgrasses grow well on saline sites.
They
could be grown as a value-added biomass crop for mulch, animal/poultry house
bedding, or biofuel.
Eventually,
fields used to grow even salt tolerant crops will no longer be farmable because
the soil will become too wet.
When
this happens, the land can be turned into marsh habitat and placed in a
conservation easement program.
Soybean field next to brackish water ditch with no conservation buffer. |
Salt
marshes provide billions of dollars of recreational value to coastal states but
rising seas are drowning out many acres of coastal marshes every year.
Therefore, it can be cost effective for states to provide incentives for farmers to create salt marshes on their property from salt-affected farmland.
What research needs
to be done?
Soybean field more protected by an herbaceous riparian buffer. |
In order to help farmers and landowners adapt to saltwater intrusion, we need to better understand the problem.
By
tracking salinity changes over time in groundwater wells and surface water,
researchers can develop a better picture of which areas are most vulnerable.
Improved
mapping of where this is occurring is also important.
Mapping
will highlight areas where it will be the most cost effective to take certain
adaptation measures, such as planting salt tolerant crops.
Researchers
also need to better understand the economic impacts of potential crop losses
and of adaptation strategies.
Finally, scientists must also refine and update water quality models to include saltwater intrusion and the impact of “unlocked” nutrients.
About the Northeast Climate Hub
We want to be the go-to ‘hub’ for people
who work the land from northern Maine to West Virginia.
The Northeast Hub is building network
collaborations and partnerships,
connecting stakeholders to climate-related resources, and working to fill-in
information gaps where needed. The 12 Northeast states form a diverse and
complex agricultural region. It includes the seven most densely populated
states, but is also the most heavily forested region of the
country. Production is varied with vegetables, horticulture, fruit
production, and specialty crops supplementing dairy, poultry, and field and
grain crops.
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