Using maps to evaluate environmental tradeoffs

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March 20, 2011, 12:00 am
March 30, 2011, 2:28 pm
Source: NOAA Office of Response and Restoration

SUMMARY

When a shoreline is threatened by an approaching oil spill, responders must quickly decide which locations along a shoreline to protect from the spill. That is, they must set their protection priorities. To do this, they first identify the places that are most important to protect, then determine which of those locations they can protect, given the resources available to them. Making these decisions sometimes requires difficult tradeoffs.

In this exercise, you present an oil spill scenario in which winds and currents are moving an oil slick towards a section of the shoreline of Delaware Bay. Your students, working in teams, (or you yourself) then use an Environmental Sensitivity Index map to identify the sensitive locations along the threatened coastline that are especially vulnerable to damage from oiling. They'll then set their protection priorities--that is, they'll decide which of those areas they can protect, and how they can do it.

CONTEXT FOR USE

The exercise is appropriate either for middle school and high school students or for adult audiences. You can download all the materials you'll need to plan and lead this exercise from these pages.

Note: This exercise is designed around a map of a section of the shoreline of Delaware Bay, in the state of Delaware. You can modify the basic exercise to use either a map of a shoreline near you or of an area related to other class projects, rather than our example map.

ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION AND TEACHING MATERIALS

Using Maps to Evaluate Environmental Tradeoffs (PDF, 672 K)

These pages contain instructions and materials for an exercise in which you (or your students, if you're an instructor) plan a protection strategy for a coastline threatened by an oil spill--just as responders to a real-life spill must do. You can follow these instructions yourself, or use them to present the exercise to a class.

TEACHING NOTES

To present this exercise to a class of students, you describe an oil spill scenario in which winds and currents are moving an oil slick towards a section of Delaware Bay shoreline. Your students, working in teams of 3-4, then use an ESI map of the threatened shoreline to set protection priorities for that area.

REFERENCES AND RESOURCES

This exercise was created by NOAA's Office of Response and Restoration.

SHORT DESCRIPTION

In this exercise students plan a protection strategy for a coastline threatened by an oil spill--just as responders to a real-life spill must do.

Citation

Nomack, M. (2011). Using maps to evaluate environmental tradeoffs. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Using_maps_to_evaluate_environmental_tradeoffs