Role of Future Reef Growth on Morphological Response of Coral Reef Islands to Sea-Level Rise

被引:21
|
作者
Masselink, G. [1 ]
McCall, R. [2 ]
Beetham, E. [3 ]
Kench, P. [4 ]
Storlazzi, C. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Plymouth, Sch Biol Sci, Coastal Proc Res Grp, Plymouth, Devon, England
[2] Deltares, Delft, Netherlands
[3] Tonkin & Taylor Int Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand
[4] Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Burnaby, BC, Canada
[5] USGS, Pacific Coastal & Marine Sci Ctr, Santa Cruz, CA USA
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
atoll island; coral reef island; reef platform; sea level rise; XBeach modeling;
D O I
10.1029/2020JF005749
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Coral reefs are widely recognized for providing a natural breakwater effect that modulates erosion and flooding hazards on low-lying sedimentary reef islands. Increased water depth across reef platforms due sea-level rise (SLR) can compromise this breakwater effect and enhance island exposure to these hazards, but reef accretion in response to SLR may positively contribute to island resilience. Morphodynamic studies suggest that reef islands can adjust to SLR by maintaining freeboard (island crest elevation above still water level) through overwash deposition and island accretion, but the impact of different future reef accretion trajectories on the morphological response of islands remains unknown. Here we show, using a process-based morphodynamic model, that, although reef growth significantly affects wave transformation processes and island morphology, it does not lead to decreased coastal flooding and island inundation. According to the model, reef islands evolve during SLR by attuning their elevation to the maximum wave runup and islands fronted by a growing reef platform attain lower elevations than those without reef growth, but have similar overwash regimes. The mean overwash discharge Q(over) across the island crest plays a key role in the ability of islands to keep up with SLR and maintain freeboard, with a Q(over) value of O (10 l m(-1) s(-1)) separating island construction from destruction. Islands, therefore, can grow vertically to keep up with SLR via flooding and overwash if specific forcing and sediment supply conditions are met, offering hope for uninhabited and sparely populated islands. However, this physical island response will negatively impact infrastructure and assets on developed islands.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Physical modelling of the response of reef islands to sea-level rise
    Tuck, Megan E.
    Kench, Paul S.
    Ford, Murray R.
    Masselink, Gerd
    GEOLOGY, 2019, 47 (09) : 803 - 806
  • [2] Future Reef Growth Can Mitigate Physical Impacts of Sea-Level Rise on Atoll Islands
    Beetham, Edward
    Kench, Paul S.
    Popinet, Stephane
    EARTHS FUTURE, 2017, 5 (10) : 1002 - 1014
  • [3] Coral reef islands can accrete vertically in response to sea level rise
    Masselink, Gerd
    Beetham, Eddie
    Kench, Paul
    SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2020, 6 (24)
  • [4] Recolonization of Marginal Coral Reef Flats in Response to Recent Sea-Level Rise
    Chen, Tianran
    Roff, George
    McCook, Laurence
    Zhao, Jianxin
    Li, Shu
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 2018, 123 (10) : 7618 - 7628
  • [5] A new model of Holocene reef initiation and growth in response to sea-level rise on the Southern Great Barrier Reef
    Sanborn, Kelsey L.
    Webster, Jody M.
    Webb, Gregory E.
    Braga, Juan Carlos
    Humblet, Marc
    Nothdurft, Luke
    Patterson, Madhavi A.
    Dechnik, Belinda
    Warner, Susan
    Graham, Trevor
    Murphy, Richard J.
    Yokoyama, Yusuke
    Obrochta, Stephen P.
    Zhao, Jian-Xin
    Salas-Saavedra, Marcos
    SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 2020, 397
  • [6] Predicting wave overtopping thresholds on coral reef-island shorelines with future sea-level rise
    Beetham, E.
    Kench, P. S.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2018, 9
  • [7] Predicting wave overtopping thresholds on coral reef-island shorelines with future sea-level rise
    E. Beetham
    P. S. Kench
    Nature Communications, 9
  • [8] Sediment supply dampens the erosive effects of sea-level rise on reef islands
    Tuck, Megan E.
    Ford, Murray R.
    Kench, Paul S.
    Masselink, Gerd
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [9] Sediment supply dampens the erosive effects of sea-level rise on reef islands
    Megan E. Tuck
    Murray R. Ford
    Paul S. Kench
    Gerd Masselink
    Scientific Reports, 11
  • [10] Hydrodynamic response of a fringing coral reef to a rise in mean sea level
    Soheila Taebi
    Charitha Pattiaratchi
    Ocean Dynamics, 2014, 64 : 975 - 987