Panelists discuss how Maine’s saltwater wetlands are under pressure

Maine’s tidal wetlands are some of the most at risk.
Four panelists sit a table during the event.
The panel discussion is part of a reporting project exploring the history, current use, and pressures Maine's coastal wetlands face, as well as solutions being explored to save them. Photo by Stephanie McFeeters.

The Maine Monitor and the Wells Reserve at Laudholm jointly hosted an expert panel discussion March 27 that was moderated by editor Kate Cough on Maine’s saltwater wetlands. The event was produced with support from the Pulitzer Center.

Wetlands are some of the world’s most productive habitats and important ecological resources. Maine has the largest wetland area anywhere in New England, with four times that of the other five states combined.

Yet since 2008, more than 12.5 million square feet of the state’s wetlands have been impacted by development, and many have been lost entirely. Maine’s tidal wetlands are some of the most at risk, threatened by rising seas and surrounded by development, with little space to migrate.

Panelists included: Susan Adamowicz (Land Management Research Demonstration Biologist at the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge), Jacob Aman (Stewardship Director at the Wells Reserve) and Jeremy Gabrielson (Senior Conservation and Community Planner at Maine Coast Heritage Trust).

The panel discussion is part of a reporting project Kate has undertaken that will explore the history, current use, and pressures Maine’s coastal wetlands face, as well as solutions being explored to save them.

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The Maine Monitor

The Maine Monitor is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service of the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting that holds Maine state government and institutions accountable. Our team of investigative journalists use data- and document-based reporting to produce stories that have an impact.
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