Chapter 30, Hawai'i and US-Affiliated Pacific Islands
Climate change—especially sea level rise, altered rainfall patterns, and rising ocean and air temperatures—impairs access to clean water and healthy food, undermines human health, threatens cultural resources and the built environment, exacerbates inequities, and disrupts economic activity and diverse ecosystems in Hawaiʻi and the US-Affiliated Pacific Islands. Adaptation efforts that build upon community strengths and center local and Indigenous Knowledge systems improve resilience.
- From Chapter 30
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Key Messages for Hawai'i and US-Affiliated Pacific Islands:
National Climate Assessment Art X Climate selections
Fish In Troubled Waters, James Keul
Provenance: Kevin Olivas Ordonez, University of Colorado at Boulder
Reuse: This item is offered under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ You may reuse this item for non-commercial purposes as long as you provide attribution and offer any derivative works under a similar license.
Artist's statement: This painting is about the effects of human-caused climate change and sea level rise on island and coastal populations. The people trapped within the composition, like fish in an aquarium, are disproportionately affected but not responsible for their circumstance. This piece was inspired by the noticeable effects of climate change in Polynesia. I witnessed eroding coastal areas and a reduced ability to provide agricultural subsistence due to saltwater infiltration when I returned to Samoa after 25 years.
Coral Conundrum: Dead or Alive, Constance Collins
Provenance: Kevin Olivas Ordonez, University of Colorado at Boulder
Reuse: This item is offered under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ You may reuse this item for non-commercial purposes as long as you provide attribution and offer any derivative works under a similar license.
Artist's statement: Coral reefs are being threatened globally from climate change, unsustainable fishing, and land-based pollution. This piece recalls coral reefs and their inhabitants. As reefs deteriorate, they lose their vibrant color and their ability to provide nutrients and shelter to thousands of marine species. Here, the gradation from color to monochrome represents the bleaching that occurs as coral dies. We need to protect these crucial ecosystems, or we lose them. I used upcycled remnant warp yarns for the coral clusters and created handmade paper.
Educational resources and guiding questions aligned with the regional Key Messages:
Each Key Message features three guiding questions to help educators navigate these topics with students. Each guiding question includes example lessons and supporting videos. The lessons were taken from the Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness Network (CLEAN) educational resources database. The videos were selected from reputable sources to support the lessons.
Key Message One: Climate Change Impairs Access to Healthy Food and Water
Access to clean, fresh water and healthy food is expected to be increasingly impaired by climate change. On low-lying atolls, sea level rise has caused saltwater contamination of fresh water. Regionally, food and water availability will be further negatively impacted by increasing temperatures, altered rainfall patterns, increased flooding and pollution, and degradation of nearshore fisheries. Adaptation actions such as traditional farming, fishing, and land-management practices can help build more resilient water and food systems. Find out more about this key messagehere.
Guiding question one: How does climate change disrupt food systems in Pacific Island communities? What are the impacts on food production, transportation, storage, and access to nutritious foods?
Example Lesson
Lesson A: Exploring Our Food System
Foodspan
https://foodspan.org/lesson-plans/unit-1-meet-the-food-system
Description: The food system is a complex network that is deeply connected to health, society, and the environment. This lesson lays the groundwork for understanding food through an integrated, systems-thinking lens. Even if teachers only cover a few FoodSpan lessons, we recommend they first teach this lesson to give students a foundation.
Instructional Time: 55-80 minutes
Grade Level: Middle and High School
Supporting Video
Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest, Alaska and The Islands
PBS
https://cleanet.org/resources/58154.html
Description: This video addresses how climate change is affecting the biomes and ecosystems in the US Pacific Northwest, Alaska, Hawaii and the Caribbean Islands. It also highlights the impacts on infrastructure and defines key climate science terms.
Video Length: 13:53 minutes
Guiding question two: In what ways is water essential for the economy and health of communities? How do climate-related factors compound to impact freshwater quality and availability in the Pacific Islands?
Example Lesson
Eyes on the Hydrosphere: Tracking Water Resources
Geodesy Tools for Societal Issues
https://cleanet.org/resources/59182.html
Description: This module introduces students to the basics of the hydrologic cycle in a way that engages them with both societal challenges related to water and methods for measuring the water system. In the final exercise, students are able to investigate water resources in a region of interest to them.
Instructional Time: Instruction time varies
Grade Level: High school and college
Supporting Video
Fresh water scarcity: An introduction to the problem*
TED-Ed
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otrpxtAmDAk&t=48s
Description: Fresh water is essential for life -- and there's not nearly enough of it for the world right now. Why is that, and what could we do? Christiana Z. Peppard lays out the big questions of our global water problem. And no, shorter showers are not the answer.
Video Length: 3:38 minutes
Supporting Resource
Plum's Island Explorer: Land and Water
https://cleanet.org/resources/58462.html
Description: This is an interactive video in which students navigate around a virtual island while learning about the characteristics of land formations and bodies of water.
Guiding question three: How will food system impacts from climate change likely impact different populations, especially indigenous populations, and industries?
Example Lesson
Food and Climate Change Curriculum
Alana Siegner
https://cleanet.org/resources/56870.html
Description: Comprehensive curriculum/unit to teach how food systems affect climate change. Strong use of real data is embedded throughout. Full lessons, mini-lessons, and short videos are presented.
Instructional Time: The series of 6 lessons takes 45 minutes each.
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
How Hawaiians Are Farming In Harmony With Nature*
Condé Nast Traveler
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2ZF5KqliLw&t=101s
Description: Condé Nast Traveler US editor-in-chief Jesse Ashlock visits Hawaii to experience firsthand the concept of Mālama, a Hawaiian word meaning "to take care." Come along as he speaks with local farmers, restaurateurs, and distillers to better understand how mālama is put into practice, how humanity can best connect to and steward the land we work, and how communities are strengthened through this lens of mutual care.
Video Length: 9:51 minutes
Key Message Two: Climate Change Undermines Human Health, but Community Strength Boosts Resilience
Climate change undermines the place-based foundations of human health and well-being in the Pacific Islands. Climate shocks and stressors compromise healthcare services and worsen long-standing social and economic inequities in both mental and physical health, and these negative impacts are expected to increase in the future. Adaptation efforts that build upon existing community strengths and center local and Indigenous Knowledge systems have great potential to boost resilience. Find out more about this key messagehere.
Guiding question one: How should cultural heritage shape the creation of resilience plans for human health in the region?
Example Lesson
Personal Narratives and Indigenous Solutions
Subject to Climate https://subjecttoclimate.org/lesson-plan/personal-narratives-and-indigenous-climate-solutions?queryID=3abd09ef3214fedefec903133d20ed36
Description: In this lesson, students research key climate change issues and potential solutions related to Hawai'i, then write a personal narrative incorporating Indigenous solutions.
Instructional Time: Two 50-minute class periods
Grade Level: High school
Supporting Video
Samoa Under Threat
Teachers' Domain
https://cleanet.org/resources/42767.html
Description: This video adapted from Bullfrog Films examines the effects of global warming on the Pacific island of Samoa with testimonials from an expert in both western science knowledge and traditional ecological knowledge. Background essay and discussion questions are included.
Video Length: 3:17 minutes
Guiding question two: What strategies can be implemented to mitigate the health impacts of extreme heat events, especially for vulnerable populations?
Example Lesson
Feeling the Heat
Lisa Gardiner, Windows to the Universe/UCAR SciEd
https://cleanet.org/resources/43171.html
Description: In this activity, students learn about the urban heat island effect by investigating which areas of their schoolyard have higher temperatures - trees, grass, asphalt, and other materials. Based on their results, they hypothesize how concentrations of surfaces that absorb heat might affect the temperature in cities - the urban heat island effect. Then they analyze data about the history of Los Angeles heat waves and look for patterns in the Los Angeles climate data and explore patterns.
Instructional Time: Two 45-minute class periods
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Extreme Heat and Community Health
Center for Disease Control and Prevention
https://cleanet.org/resources/57228.html
Description: This short video clip is part of a longer video series titled How Climate Affects Community Health. This clip focuses on human health risks from extreme heat events caused by increasing global temperatures.
Video Length: 0:43 seconds
Guiding question three: How can local and Indigenous Knowledge systems improve resilience and increase adaptive capacity in Hawaii?
Example Lesson
Take Only What You Need: Implementation of Hawaiian Fishponds
Subject to Climate
https://subjecttoclimate.org/lesson-plan/sustainability-implementation-of-hawaiian-fishponds?queryID=f9cc1e469ca41b400929c401b23c091b
Description: In this lesson, students learn the connection between sustainability and survival, and the importance of Native Hawaiian sustainability practices.
Instructional Time: Two 50-60 minute class periods
Grade Level: Middle School
Supporting Videos
Traditional Ecological Knowledge & Place-based Learning Communities
Humboldt PBLC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liKV74avPso&t=542s
Description: There are five Place-Based Learning Communities in the College of Natural Resources & Sciences at Humboldt State University: Among Giants, Klamath Connection, Representing Realities, Rising Tides, and Stars to Rocks. This video introduces some of those communities and their work.
Video Length: 10:33 minutes
Ahupua'a: Native Hawaiians Taking Back Their Watersheds
Andrew Millison
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7q8friw1p8
Description: Permaculture instructor Andrew Millison journeys to Hawaii to investigate the ecological and cultural restoration work of the Independent Sovereign Nation of Hawaii, an aboriginal organization who are actively rebuilding the traditional Ahupua'a watershed-scale agricultural system on the Island of Oahu. This video looks into the history of the Nation of Hawaii and their village in Pu'uhonua O Waimanalo, and the pieces of the Ahupua'a they are restoring from the tops of the mountains above the clouds to the traditional fishponds built below the estuaries into the ocean.
Video Length: 28:14 minutes
Two-Eyed Seeing: Science and Traditional Ecological Knowledge
California Academy of Sciences
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LI9roIYyhE
Description: Why is it important to listen to Indigenous voices as we regenerate the natural world? Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) dates back thousands of years and Indigenous peoples have always understood that we are a part of the ecosystem and in service to it.
Video Length: 5:51 minutes
Key Message Three: Rising Sea Levels Threaten Infrastructure and Local
Economies and Exacerbate Existing Inequities
Climate change, particularly sea level rise (SLR), will continue to negatively impact the built environment and will harm numerous sectors of the islands' economies. SLR intensifies loss of territory and exclusive economic zones, particularly in low islands. Climate-driven changes will exacerbate existing social challenges by disrupting livelihoods. Adaptation to climate change and recovery from disasters is logistically challenging and disproportionately more expensive in the islands. Government and community groups have developed innovative ways to reduce emissions and improve resilience by moving toward renewable energy and green infrastructure, nature-based urban planning, forward-looking building codes, and sustainable and equitable economic growth, guided by Western science and Traditional Knowledge. Find out more about this key message here.
Guiding question one: How are communities working to improve the infrastructure in the region and what are the main challenges for creating and implementing successful adaptation plans?
Example Lesson
Understanding The Flood Zone
Hawaii Climate Toolkit
https://www.hiclimateprojects.org/understanding-the-flood-zone.html
Description: How can we better understand and predict the behavior of our local stream, and prepare for the future? Through the experience of learning about the streams in their community watershed, students will design and present a Stream Plan prototype to address flooding in Hawaii.
Instructional Time: Two to three class periods
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Energy 101: Concentrating Solar Power
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
https://cleanet.org/resources/42794.html
Description: This video describes how concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies reflect and collect solar energy to generate electricity. This video explains what CSP is, how it works, and focuses on parabolic troughs.
Video Length: 2:16 minutes
Guiding question two: How do livelihoods and economies in the Pacific Islands depend on fishing, agriculture, and tourism?
Example Lesson
Climate Change and National Parks
Vanessa Wilson, Subject to Climate
https://subjecttoclimate.org/lesson-plan/climate-change-and-national-parks?queryID=ccaa028aae00c79bf3ae7c72744e2548
Description: This lesson educates students on the impact that climate change has on national parks. Students explore national parks in Google Earth and discuss a series of images related to climate change and national parks.
Instructional Time: 60 minutes
Grade Level: Sixth through eighth
Supporting Video
Tourists flock to natural wonders being affected by climate change
CBS Mornings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NM7Mqf4Z_LE
Description: The bucket lists of many tourists now include destinations like the glaciers of Iceland, the Great Barrier Reef, Mount Kilimanjaro and the Galapagos Islands. They travel to visit locations that may not look the same or even continue to exist in the future due to climate change. Ben Tracy reports.
Video Length: 5:07 minutes
Guiding question three: Why are certain components of the built environment and infrastructure more vulnerable to climate change in Hawaii?
Example Lesson
Graphing Sea-Level Trends
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, National Aeronautics and Space Administration
https://cleanet.org/resources/56884.html
Description: Students use long-term sea-level rise data set to create models and compare short-term trends to long-term trends. They then determine whether sea-level rise is occurring based on the data.
Instructional Time: This learning activity takes two 45-minute class periods
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Expecting the Unexpected: Abrupt Climate Change
Yale Climate Forum
https://cleanet.org/resources/46172.html
Description: In this video scientists discuss possible rates of sea level rise, storms and resulting damage, rising temperatures and melting ice, and their collective effects on ecosystems.
Video Length: 7:24 minutes
Key Message Four: Responses to Rising Threats May Help Safeguard Tropical Ecosystems and Biodiversity
Coral reef degradation could affect thousands of people and cause millions of dollars in damages.
Provenance: Kevin Olivas Ordonez, University of Colorado at Boulder
Reuse: This item is offered under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ You may reuse this item for non-commercial purposes as long as you provide attribution and offer any derivative works under a similar license.
The structure and composition of Pacific Island coastal and marine ecological communities are directly threatened by rising ocean temperatures, ocean acidification, and sea level rise. Increasingly severe droughts and warming are increasing fire risk and will have broad negative impacts on native plants and wildlife, including an increased risk of forest bird extinctions. Adaptation strategies improve the resilience of ecosystems, including ecosystem protection, ecological restoration, invasive species prevention and control, and investments in fire prevention. Find out more about this key message here.
Guiding question one: What role do corals play in marine ecosystems and why are protecting coral reefs important to the overall health of the region?
Example Lesson
Coral Bleaching: A White Hot Problem
NOAA Sea Grant and National Marine Educators Association
https://cleanet.org/resources/41896.html
Description: This teaching activity addresses environmental stresses on corals. Students assess coral bleaching using water temperature data from the NOAA National Data Buoy Center. Students learn about the habitat of corals, the stresses on coral populations, and the impact of increased sea surface temperatures on coral reefs. In a discussion section, the connection between coral bleaching and global warming is drawn.
Instructional Time: 60 minutes
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Changing Planet: Coral Reefs
NBC Learn/Windows to the Universe
https://cleanet.org/resources/42849.html
Description: This video provides a comprehensive introduction to the role of coral reefs, the physiology of corals, and the impacts of ocean warming and acidification on coral survival. It highlights experts from the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences and the University of Miami.
Video Length: 6:04 minutes
Guiding question two: How are rising ocean temperatures and marine heatwaves projected to impact marine ecosystems and species in the Pacific Islands?
Example Lesson
Stressed Out!
Mel Goodwin, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)- Ocean Explorer
https://cleanet.org/resources/42999.html
Description: In this activity, students research various topics about ocean health, e.g. overfishing, habitat destruction, invasive species, climate change, pollution, and ocean acidification. An optional extension activity has them creating an aquatic biosphere in a bottle experiment in which they can manipulate variables.
Instructional Time: Four to six class periods.
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
'The Blob' - The Story of the Pacific Heatwave
Ben M. Collins, Ascentios
https://cleanet.org/resources/58163.html
Description: This video explores the effect on seabirds of a three-year ocean warming event (2013-16) in the NW Pacific. With ocean warming, a massive die off occurred based on the decline of food resources.
Video Length: 9:29 minutes
Guiding question three: Why are Hawaii and US-Affiliated Pacific Islands experiencing an increased risk of wildfires and what can be done to help mitigate that risk?
Example Lesson
HEART Force Wildfire Game
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
https://cleanet.org/resources/58192.html
Description: In this interactive game, students solve the challenges that their community faces during the course of a wildfire event by using available individual and community resources. Students work in three zone response teams to determine the responses they will take in each round as the wildfire situation evolves.
Instructional Time: This activity takes one 60-minute class period.
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Wildfires Out West
Climate Central
https://cleanet.org/resources/43818.html
Description: This video from ClimateCentral looks at the way climate conditions can affect vegetation in the West, and what influence this has on wildfires. Drought and rainfall can have very different wildfire outcomes, depending on vegetation type, extent, and location.
Video Length: 3:13 minutes
Key Message Five: Indigenous Knowledge Systems Strengthen Island Resilience
Conservation efforts across the region help to restore ecosystem health and protect native species.
Provenance: Kevin Olivas Ordonez, University of Colorado at Boulder
Reuse: This item is offered under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ You may reuse this item for non-commercial purposes as long as you provide attribution and offer any derivative works under a similar license.
Indigenous Peoples and their knowledge systems are central to the resilience of island communities amidst the changing climate. Reciprocal and spiritual relationships among the lands, territories, waters, resources, and peoples are being strengthened and sustained as communities adapt and manage their resources collectively. Indigenous Peoples are identifying and quantifying the potential loss and migration of critical resources and expanding the cultivation of traditional food crops on high islands. Find out more about this key message here.
Guiding question one: What are some of the opportunities and adaptations that Indigenous communities are undertaking to preserve and maintain their culture?
Example Lesson
7th Generation Thinking (Climate Superheroes #1)
Hannah Loera, Subject to Climate
https://subjecttoclimate.org/lesson-plan/7th-generation-thinking-climate-superheroes-1?queryID=18a1c2a08c7694b76e87f10000eecf16
Description: In this lesson, students research Indigenous sustainability practices related to Hawaiʻi and write three short biographies on Indigenous leaders.
Instructional Time: 100 minutes
Grade Level: Eleventh and twelfth
Supporting Video
VICTREE Gardens: HomeGrown Food Security
Olohana Foundation
https://olohana.org/index.php/victree-gardens-homegrown-food-security/
Description: The VICTree Gardens Program offers a practical, achievable, dependable and localized solution to food insecurity: small tree gardens planted in yards, and the ability to virtually connect them all. Each of these Tree Gardens will create a perennial food forest designed to provide emergency nourishment for a family of four for four to six days in the event of a natural disaster.
Video Length: 23:24 minutes
Guiding question two: What does it mean to have a reciprocal relationship with the land and how do communities in the Pacific Islands honor that relationship to create more resilient communities?
Example Lesson
Preserving Indigenous Hawaiian Culture Through Aloha
April Pulcini and the University of North Carolina
https://worldview.unc.edu/lesson-plan/preserving-indigenous-hawaiian-culture-through-aloha/
Description: Students will begin this lesson learning about Hawaiian history. Then they will explore Native Hawaiian traditions and learn how many of these traditions were banned or altered during colonization. Native Hawaiians revived their culture through determination and Aloha (a feeling of love, compassion, mercy, peace, and kindness) during the Hawaiian Renaissance.
Instructional Time: Five one-hour class periods
Grade Level: Kindergarten through fifth
Supporting Video
Coral Reefs of Vanuatu | Adaptation
LearningMedia, Public Broadcasting Service
https://cleanet.org/resources/58953.html
Description: The coral reefs of the South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu are the backbone of the island's environmental and economic health. Today they face destruction from a silent predator that can rapidly decimate an entire reef. In this video, students learn about how a starfish is destroying the coral reefs of Vanuatu and how the islanders are adapting.
Video Length: 17:32
Guiding question three: How are human health, the built environment, and ecosystem health uniquely connected in Hawaii and the US-Affiliated Pacific Islands?
Example Lesson
Your Place in Focus | Adaptation
Shari Carswell, Public Broadcasting Service
https://cleanet.org/resources/58955.html
Description: This lesson guides students to connect the PBS Adaptation video series on climate adaptation to their own community. Students describe their community, identify climate impacts faced by their community, research how their community is adapting to those impacts, and then create a digital story about what they found.
Instructional Time: One to two 50-minute class periods
Grade Level: Sixth through twelfth
Supporting Video
Samoa Under Threat
Andrea Torrice, Bullfrog Films; Teachers' Domain
https://cleanet.org/resources/42767.html
Description: The possible effects of global warming on the Pacific island of Samoa are examined in this video segment adapted from Bullfrog Films. For many Samoans who grew up with a subsistence way of life, learning to cope with natural disasters is nothing new. But, as Penehuru Lefale—the climatologist interviewed in the video—asserts, extreme weather events appear to be on the rise, threatening the survival of a Polynesian culture that is thousands of years old.
Video Length: 3:17
Pathways to action for the Hawai'i and US-Affiliated Pacific Islands*
*These selections were curated by CLEAN
The following actions and case studies highlight ideas for climate change adaptation and mitigation at multiple scales and are meant to support and inspire students and educators to take steps that address the challenges outlined in this chapter.
Action 1: Coastal Wetland Restoration
Agriculture, development, and natural disasters have degraded many coastal wetlands. Restoring mangrove forests, salt marshes, and seagrass beds to health revives carbon sequestration. For more information, see Project Drawdown Coastal Wetland Restoration solution: https://drawdown.org/solutions/coastal-wetland-restoration
Regional Case Study: To restore function in a degraded but historically, culturally, and ecologically important watershed on O'ahu's Eastern Coast, The Nature Conservancy worked closely with local partners and used an adaptive management approach to ensure successful wetland restoration.
https://toolkit.climate.gov/case-studies/nature-conservancy-%E2%80%94-wetlands-restoration-ecosystem-and-community-resilience-he%E2%80%99eia-o
Classroom-level action: Visit the coast
Description: Visit a coastal or ocean site to experience the ecosystem and the health of the coast.
Supporting Resources:
Drawdown EcoChallenge coastal, ocean, and engineered sinks solutions
https://drawdown.ecochallenge.org/challenges/coastal-ocean-and-engineered-sinks#:~:text=ADVOCATE%20FOR%20WETLAND%20PROTECTION
Action 2: Seafloor Protection
Action 3: Flood Preparedness
Flood preparedness is crucial for minimizing the loss of life and property damage during flood events. It ensures that communities are better equipped to respond quickly and effectively, reducing the long-term impacts on infrastructure, economy, and public health.
Regional Case Study: Preparing for La Niña- O'ahu's busy construction industry depends on being able to dispose of demolition and construction wastes. Forecasts for a developing La Niña—often accompanied by heavy rains in Hawai'i—alerted managers at the island's main construction landfill to their climate vulnerability.
https://toolkit.climate.gov/case-studies/preparing-la-ni%C3%B1a
Classroom-level action: Build green infrastructure to help reduce runoff and stormwater flows that could exceed system capacities
Description: Implement bioretention areas such as rain gardens and swales (depressions to capture water) and install vegetation or pervious materials instead of impervious surfaces
Supporting Resources:
Camden SMART Initiative's Completed Projects
http://www.camdensmart.com/projects.html
Camden Planting: Brimm School example
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151348177313273.539322.400311073272&type=3
Action 4: Prepare for Drought Events and Water Scarcity
Looking for more ideas for climate change actions? Explore the National Climate Assessment chapters on adaptation (chapter 31) and mitigation (chapter 32).
National Climate Assessment Hawai'i and US-Affiliated Pacific Islands Chapter Connections:
The national climate assessment includes multiple chapters on climate change-specific topics. The chapters and key messages offer ways to further engage with the NCA and find out more information related to the region.
Disclaimer: The National Climate Assessment regional resources for educators is written, edited, and moderated by each regional team of contributors. Posts reflect the views of the regional team themselves and not necessarily Climate.gov, NOAA and USGCRP.