East Coast salt marshes to be restored to battle effects of climate change
HALIFAX — At least four salt water marshes in the Maritimes are to be restored — some of them three centuries after early Acadian farmers first drained them using dikes — in a bid to help absorb the rising sea levels and storm surges caused by climate change.
Saint Mary’s University will get $1.8-million in federal funds to restore 75 hectares of marshland around the Bay of Fundy.
Project leader Danika van Proosdij, a geography professor at Saint Mary’s, said the marshes will be created by realigning and decommissioning dikes that were originally built by Acadian farmers about 300 years ago.
“The salt marshes are really the first line of coastal defence that protect the coastal communities that exist behind the dikes,” Proosdij said after the announcement was made Monday at the Halifax university by Treasury Board President Scott Brison, who is also a Nova Scotia MP.


