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Wave attenuation in mangroves: A quantitative approach to field observations
Institution:1. Water Engineering and Management, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands;2. Singapore-Delft Water Alliance, National University of Singapore, Engineering Drive 2, 117576 , Singapore;3. Departamento de Engenharia Civil, Universidade de Aveiro, Campus Universitário de Santiago, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal;4. Water Engineering and Management, University of Twente, The Netherlands;1. HR Wallingford, Howbery Park, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10 8BA, UK;2. Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PJ, UK;3. School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, The King''s Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JL, UK;4. School of Marine Science and Engineering, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK;1. Dept. of Hydraulic Eng., Delft University of Technology, Stevinweg 1, 2628 CN Delft, The Netherlands;2. Flanders Hydraulics Research, Berchemlei 115, 2140 Antwerp, Belgium
Abstract:Coastal mangroves, dwelling at the interface between land and sea, provide an important contribution to reducing risk from coastal hazards by attenuating incident waves and by trapping and stabilizing sediments. This paper focusses on relations between vegetation densities, wave attenuation rates, sediment characteristics and sedimentation rates in mangroves. These processes were studied along two cross-shore transects through mangroves fringing estuaries in the southern Andaman region of Thailand. Volumetric vegetation densities in these mangroves were ranging up to 32‰, depending on the water depth. Generalized total wave attenuation rates increased from 0.002 m? 1 in the sparsely vegetated forest fringes with Avicennia and Sonneratia species, up to 0.012 m? 1 in the dense Rhizophora vegetation in the back of the forests. The total wave attenuation rates integrate effects of shoaling and energy losses due to various bio-physical interactions within the mangrove ecosystem. Wave attenuation in the mangroves is presumably dominated by energy losses due to vegetation drag, since wave attenuation due to bottom friction and viscous dissipation on the bare mudflats is significantly lower than those inside the mangrove vegetation.Additionally, wave attenuation in the mangroves was found to facilitate enhanced net sediment deposition and a gradual fining of the bed material. These findings corroborate the coastal defence function of mangroves by quantifying their contribution to wave attenuation and sediment trapping. The explicit linking of these properties to vegetation composition and structure facilitates modelling studies investigating the mechanisms determining the coastal defence capacities of mangroves.
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