Truro News

SMU prof begins work on four-year remediatio­n project

Four sites focused on with two other high-risk areas to be identified

- BY FRANCIS CAMPBELL

Bigger’s not always better.

That’s the way Danika van Proosdij, a geography professor at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax who teaches a course in Bay of Fundy environmen­tal issues, views the province’s 240-kilometre network of dikes.

“In some areas, making a dike higher is just not feasible anymore,” said van Proosdij, team leader on a $1.8-million federal project to restore 75 hectares of marshes in the Bay of Fundy.

Van Proosdij said many of the earthen Acadian dikes constructe­d three centuries ago were built close to the rivers and followed the contours of the river itself.

“It is kind of like a windy snake,” she said. “What we are doing in some of the sites is actually straighten­ing out that line. Instead of following every bend and turn in a river, we are actually selecting a line that is a little bit inland and that is actually a shorter distance and there is less dike to maintain.”

The four-year project will focus on four sites, including work already undertaken on the Cornwallis River near Kentville and the Converse marsh in Cumberland County, where dikes have already been breached. Two other sites identified as high risks were to be selected from a list of five locations.

“These are areas that have been identified by the Department of Agricultur­e as areas where the dike is at risk of failing,” van Proosdij said. “One of the ways you can respond to that is by actually moving where the orientatio­n and line of that dike is and allowing part of that section that was formerly behind the dike to actually have tidal flow so you will get the reintroduc­tion of saltmarsh species.

“That provides a natural buffer to coastal erosion and absorbs storm water energy and helps to protect the dike that remains and the land that remains and the new dike that you build further back.”

She said the project has no funding to purchase land and its limited budget will probably preclude sites that require extensive archeologi­cal work.

Van Proosdij said the project entails examining site preconditi­ons, designing changes and monitoring the effects of those alteration­s.

“Think of them as demonstrat­ion pilot sites so that people can understand if it does work and what to expect,” she said. “So we can have a kind of a playbook, in a sense, that is tested so people can see in Cornwallis, in the river system, this is what happens, this is what it looks like, this is what we need to consider.”

 ?? IAN FAIRCLOUGH-FILE/SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? Marshland lies next to a canal in East Amherst. At top of page, a bulldozer levels out soil after a section of dike along the Cornwallis River between Kentville and New Minas was moved and built up as part of flood prevention work to counter climate change projection­s of water levels.
IAN FAIRCLOUGH-FILE/SALTWIRE NETWORK Marshland lies next to a canal in East Amherst. At top of page, a bulldozer levels out soil after a section of dike along the Cornwallis River between Kentville and New Minas was moved and built up as part of flood prevention work to counter climate change projection­s of water levels.

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