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From invasive species tracking to water security – what’s lost with federal funding cuts at US Climate Adaptation Science Centers

By Eric November 29, 2025

**The Crucial Role of Climate Adaptation Science Centers in Combating Invasive Species and Climate Change**

Mahonia bealei, commonly known as Beale’s barberry or leatherleaf mahonia, serves as a striking example of the invasive species that threaten native ecosystems across the United States. Despite its invasive nature, this evergreen shrub is still marketed for ornamental landscaping purposes, illustrating the challenges faced by resource managers in controlling such species. The ongoing battle against invasive plants is compounded by climate change, which is expanding their ranges and complicating management efforts. The U.S. Geological Survey’s Climate Adaptation Science Centers play an essential role in addressing these challenges, providing critical research and support for local resource managers. However, recent federal budget cuts have jeopardized their operations, leaving vital projects in limbo.

The Climate Adaptation Science Centers, established to help communities adapt to the impacts of climate change, have been instrumental in various initiatives, including tracking invasive species, ensuring sustainable water supplies, and enhancing agricultural practices. For instance, in south-central Texas, researchers have collaborated with the Edwards Aquifer Authority to create high-resolution climate projections that inform water management strategies. These projections are vital for sustaining the groundwater-fed springs that support both human populations and endangered species. Similarly, on the Hawaiian island of O’ahu, the Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center has been working to restore fallow lands through agroforestry, a practice that not only mitigates fire risks posed by invasive grasses but also enhances soil health and carbon storage.

Unfortunately, as funding for these centers has been cut, the progress made in combating invasive species and adapting to climate change has stalled. The Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, for example, has been at the forefront of mapping invasive species risks and developing strategies to manage their spread. Their research has led to significant updates in state regulations regarding invasive plant sales, but these efforts are now threatened by funding shortages. As resource managers and scientists voice their concerns to Congress, there is hope that proposed budgets will restore funding to these critical centers, allowing them to continue their work in protecting ecosystems and communities from the dual threats of invasive species and climate change. The future of America’s natural resources may depend on the reinstatement of support for these vital research initiatives.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CIU67P6fe58

Mahonia bealei, also known as Beale’s barberry or leatherleaf mahonia, is invasive but still sold for landscaping.

HQ Flower Guide via Wikimedia Commons
,
CC BY-SA
When the Trump administration began
freezing federal funding
for climate and ecosystem research, one of the programs hit hard was ours: the U.S. Geological Survey’s Climate Adaptation Science Centers.

These nine regional centers help fish, wildlife, water, land – and, importantly, people – adapt to rising global temperatures and other climate shifts.

The centers have been helping to track invasive species, protect water supplies and make agriculture more sustainable in the face of increasing drought conditions. They’re
improving wildfire forecasting
,
protecting shorelines
and
saving Alaska salmon
, among many other projects.

All of this work happens through partnerships: Scientists, many of them affiliated with universities,
team up with
public and private resource managers – the people who manage water supplies, wildlands, recreation areas, shorelines and other natural resources – to develop the
research and solutions those managers need
.

The Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center has been tracking invasive species to help natural resource managers prepare. Federally funded scientists develop risk maps and work with local communities to head off invasive species damage.

Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change Network
,
CC BY

But in spring 2025, after 15 years of operation of the centers, the president’s
proposed federal budget zeroed out funding
for them. Federal workers at the centers were threatened with layoffs.

Three of the nine regional centers – covering the South Central, Pacific Islands and Northeast regions – were
left unfunded
when the Office of Management and Budget withheld and then blocked funds Congress had already appropriated.

In spite of these challenges, we have hope that the work will eventually continue. Congress’ proposed budgets in both the U.S.
House
and
Senate
recommend fully funding the Climate Adaptation Science Centers, and there’s a reason:
Natural resources managers and the public
have consistently told their elected officials that the work is important.

Here are three examples of projects in regions where funding has been blocked that show why resource managers are speaking up.

Sustainable water supplies in arid lands

In south-central Texas, the
Edwards Aquifer Authority
is responsible for providing sustained water resources for 2.5 million people in cities such as San Antonio and Uvalde. It also maintains the groundwater-fed springs that
support threatened and endangered species
.

In recent decades, however, both heavy rainfall and prolonged, intense droughts have increased uncertainty about how much water will be available from the aquifer.

At the
South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center
, researchers from the University of Oklahoma teamed up with the aquifer authority to develop
high-resolution climate projections
for assessing future changes to groundwater recharge and ecologically sensitive springs.

The climate projections are helping the authority determine whether its existing drought-mitigation practices are
effective for sustaining freshwater springs and groundwater levels
.

The San Marcos springs on the Texas State University campus, shown in this panorama photo, are fed by the Edwards aquifer.

Adrienne Wootten

Losing funding for the Climate Adaptation Science Center means this technical guidance for water management and many other projects in the region are no longer available.

Stalled science doesn’t just hurt Texas. Many arid and semi-arid regions of the U.S. rely on aquifers to provide water supplies for homes, businesses and agriculture, and they need this type of research to maintain water security.

Solutions for agriculture and fire protection

On the Hawaiian island of O’ahu, up to
40% of agricultural land is unmanaged and unplanted
pasture that is often invaded by non-native grasses. These grasses increase fire risk as the islands face
more intense and longer-lasting droughts
.

The
Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center
has been working on a solution to help restore fallow lands through agroforestry, in which farmers grow crops among trees, mirroring Indigenous practices.

In agroforestry, crops such as coffee are grown among trees, preserving the trees’ carbon storage while helping to keep invasive plants at bay.

Leah Bremer/University of Hawaii at Mānoa Institute for Sustainability and Resilience

Climate Adaptation Science Center
researchers at the University of Hawai’i Mānoa
partnered with
Kākoʻo ʻŌiwi
, a nonprofit organization that is restoring Indigenous food systems, to identify lands that will remain suitable for agroforestry even under worsening drought caused by climate change. The research has shown how management practices can
increase soil health
and
increase the soil’s carbon storage
.

Since 2019, researchers have taught hundreds of volunteers from the community and student groups about restoration practices that include food production, forest conservation and climate resilience.

Lost funding for Climate Adaptation Science Centers put the brakes on science that supports local communities.

Managing invasive species in a warming world

Invasive species
cost the U.S. economy an estimated US$10 billion a year
in damage to crops, forests and ecosystems. At the same time, climate change is
increasing the range of many invasive species
and making them harder to control.

Scientists involved in the Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center map invasive species risks. This map shows the current and potential range map of Beale’s barberry, or leatherleaf mahonia, an invasive evergreen shrub that is still being sold for ornamental uses. The plant, which deer don’t eat, has taken over habitat and outcompeted native species in parts of the U.S.

Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change Network
,
CC BY

In 2016, researchers from the
Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center
at the University of Massachusetts Amherst learned that resource managers were concerned about how climate change would affect invasive species ranges. To understand and address the needs of resource managers, Climate Adaptation Science Center researchers created the
Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change Network
, which has become a primary source for mapping invasive species’ movement and sharing invasive species research across the region.

Climate Adaptation Science Center researchers conducted a series of projects to identify invasive plants expanding into
northern
and
southern New England
and
mid-Atlantic states
. The results have helped the state of Massachusetts update its
invasive plant risk assessment
and expanded regulators’ lists of invasive species to prohibit from sales in New York and
Maine
.

States recently asked the center’s researchers to develop a database of current and emerging invasive plants across the Northeast to help them build consistent and proactive defenses against emerging invasive species. Stalled funding has also stalled this project.

These are the kind of
real-world solutions
that federal funding cuts are stopping. When that work disappears, it leaves America and Americans more vulnerable to climate change.

Bethany Bradley receives funding from the US Geological Survey as the University Director of the Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center.
Adrienne Wootten previously received funding from the US Geological Survey for research projects through the South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center and is currently engaged in research with the Edwards Aquifer Authority.
Ryan Longman receives funding from the US Geological Survey as the University Director of the Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center

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