Delaware

Coastal Habitats

Protecting Delaware’s fragile coastal, marine and estuarine areas requires partners and vision.

The Delaware chapter helps to preserve the Earth’s major habitats by working with landowners, state and federal government, and other partners to permanently protect the state’s fragile coastal, marine and estuarine areas.

Making A Difference On-the-Ground

Here’s where the Delaware chapter works to benefit the state’s coastal, marine and estuarine habitats:

Reaching Beyond Borders

As demands on oceans grow, the Conservancy engages in coordinated versus piecemeal approaches towards ensuring that all stakeholders – from industry and energy to conservation and recreation – have a seat at the table and comprehensive picture of the seascape and its many uses and challenges.

  • As part of its Northwest Atlantic Marine Ecoregional Assessment, the Conservancy is establishing a “blueprint” of places that if collectively conserved, would ensure the long-term survival of natural and human communities dependent on this geographic area.
  • Staff from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York and Delaware are setting priorities and identifying strategies required to conserve the Delaware Bay & Basin, which spans from the Delaware River’s headwaters in New York to the Delaware Bay, and involves partners in Brazil and Argentina, where migratory birds spend much of their life cycle.
  • Staff from Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey, Delaware and North Carolina, and partners from universities and government agencies, formed the Mid-Atlantic Seascape team, to protect this landscape extending from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina up to the Sandy Hook area of New Jersey, and offshore 40 to 60 miles to the Continental Shelf.
Sticking With Science
  • The Delaware chapter working with colleagues to promote marine spatial planning — a process using maps and other tools to help ocean users make informed and coordinated decisions about how to use marine resources.
  • The Conservancy continues to conduct research and seek out private and public partnerships in an effort to help the state and its protected areas prepare for and adapt to predicted sea level rises brought on by climate change.
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