How Artificial Salt Marsh Vegetation Reduces The Threshold For Sediment Resuspension In Wave-Current Flows
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59490/coastlab.2024.799Keywords:
Vegetation, Resuspension, Sediment, Flume Experiments, Wave-Current FlowsAbstract
Suspended sediment transport and retention within salt marshes is a key factor in their resilience against erosion associated with threats such as sea level rise and coastal squeeze. Salt marshes are vegetated intertidal wetlands found in temperate climate zones. Their presence contributes to flood protection, coastal flora and fauna, and carbon sequestration (Temmerman et al., 2013). Vegetation-induced resuspension of fine sediment helps to transport fine particles deeper into salt marshes. The interaction between waves, currents, and vegetation may resuspend sediment sooner than it would without vegetation. It has been shown in conditions with only currents (Liu et al., 2021; Tinoco & Coco, 2014) or only waves (Tinoco & Coco, 2018) that the threshold for resuspension is lower within vegetated meadows than without vegetation. However, the threshold has not yet been studied for combined wave-current conditions, which often exist in the marsh environment. Identifying this threshold will enable us to predict when in a tidal cycle sediment resuspension occurs and can be used to improve sediment transport model. We use flume experiments to methodically identify the threshold of sediment resuspension in artificial salt marsh meadows of three different area densities under combined wave-current flows.
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Copyright (c) 2024 THOMAS VAN VEELEN, HEIDI NEPF, SUZANNE HULSCHER, BAS BORSJE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.