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Coastal Processes
Coastal ponds, estuaries, embayments,
open coasts, and coastal resources are highly impacted by society's
commercial, recreational, and residential activities. In southeastern
Massachusetts, development in coastal communities was among the
highest rate of increase within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
The population of Barnstable County
(Cape Cod), Dukes County (Martha’s Vineyard), and Nantucket
County has been dramatic when compared to overall population growth
in the Commonwealth, as shown in the following graph:

Other threats to coastal communities
include sea-level rise, erosion, conflicts between the protection
of waterfront property and the preservation of the beneficial functions
of coastal landforms and resources, conflicts between private ownership
of the coast and public access, and recreational demands of the
increasing coastal population (boating, fishing, shellfishing, beaches).
Research supported within this theme is often multidisciplinary
and interfaces directly with the management community charged with
making regulatory decisions.
Goal
1: Stakeholders will use science-based information to make more
informed decisions about coastal land use issues.
Objective:
Increase the availability of science-based information for coastal
residents, managers, stewards, and decision-makers regarding protection,
prediction, risk reduction, and economic impacts associated with
living along the shore.
Goal 2: Stakeholders will
maximize use and enjoyment of coastal resources while minimizing
human impacts on the beneficial functions of coastal landforms and
coastal processes.
Objective:
Stakeholders will have scientific-based information to make more
informed decisions about land-use issues, particularly regarding
coastal landform function and coastal processes.
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