Chesapeake Quarterly
Chesapeake Quarterly : Volume 24 Number 1 : Restoration Takes Root: Living Shorelines for Changing Coasts

Restoration Takes Root: Living Shorelines for Changing Coasts

June 2025 • Volume 24 Number 1

Roots at the Water’s Edge

By Ashley Goetz

As erosion threatens treasured places around the Chesapeake Bay, communities are turning to nature-based solutions. Explore how living shorelines are helping to protect coasts and heritage on opposite shores of the Bay.

Seeding Shorelines

By Madeleine Jepsen

Living shoreline plants have a tough job: they must hold down the sandy shoreline with their roots and ease waves with their stems, all while surviving salty water. 

 

Designing with Nature

By Madeleine Jepsen

Researchers are on a mission to determine which key components make a living shoreline successful at preventing erosion—but first they must gather crucial data. 

 

Living Rocks for Living Shorelines

By Madeleine Jepsen

Oyster biology is both an obstacle and an opportunity when it comes to living shorelines. Learn how and why oysters are sometimes included in living shoreline projects. 

 

A Marsh Grows in Brooklyn

By Ashley Goetz

A living shoreline is under construction in Baltimore City—part of a sweeping project that aims to restore more than 50 acres of habitat along 11 miles of shoreline. 

 
Cover photo by Logan Bilbrough
Cover photo by Logan Bilbrough

In This Issue

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New Book Includes Bay Case Study
Ecosystem-Based Management for the Oceans, Karen McLeod and Heather Leslie, Editors, Island Press, May 2009, 392 pp.

Nineteen chapters by distinguished experts describe what it means to manage our oceans and coasts as ecosystems. At the book's heart lie the concepts of social and ecological resilience — the extent to which human and natural systems can maintain function in the face of disturbance. The Chesapeake Bay provides one powerful case study, with a chapter by Donald F. Boesch and Erica Goldman, and another by Lisa Wainger and Jim Boyd.

For more information, visit www.islandpress.com/bookstore/details.php?prod_id=1750.

Contents
June 2009
vol. 8, no. 2
CQ Archive
[Maryland Sea Grant] Maryland Sea Grant NOAA
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Support Maryland Sea Grant
Chesapeake Quarterly : Volume 24 Number 1 : Restoration Takes Root: Living Shorelines for Changing Coasts

Restoration Takes Root: Living Shorelines for Changing Coasts

June 2025 • Volume 24 Number 1

Roots at the Water’s Edge

By Ashley Goetz

As erosion threatens treasured places around the Chesapeake Bay, communities are turning to nature-based solutions. Explore how living shorelines are helping to protect coasts and heritage on opposite shores of the Bay.

Seeding Shorelines

By Madeleine Jepsen

Living shoreline plants have a tough job: they must hold down the sandy shoreline with their roots and ease waves with their stems, all while surviving salty water. 

 

Designing with Nature

By Madeleine Jepsen

Researchers are on a mission to determine which key components make a living shoreline successful at preventing erosion—but first they must gather crucial data. 

 

Living Rocks for Living Shorelines

By Madeleine Jepsen

Oyster biology is both an obstacle and an opportunity when it comes to living shorelines. Learn how and why oysters are sometimes included in living shoreline projects. 

 

A Marsh Grows in Brooklyn

By Ashley Goetz

A living shoreline is under construction in Baltimore City—part of a sweeping project that aims to restore more than 50 acres of habitat along 11 miles of shoreline. 

 
Cover photo by Logan Bilbrough
Cover photo by Logan Bilbrough

In This Issue

Related Links

Maryland Sea Grant
[Maryland Sea Grant] Maryland Sea Grant NOAA
Stay Connected
 
Chesapeake Quarterly is published by Maryland Sea Grant | Privacy Policy | © 2025 Maryland Sea Grant
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Chesapeake Quarterly is published by Maryland Sea Grant | Privacy Policy | © 2025 Maryland Sea Grant