Affiliation:
1. Geography and Ryan Institute University of Galway Galway Ireland
2. Earth Sciences Universidad de Cádiz Cádiz Spain
3. Department of Biological and Geographical Sciences University of Huddersfield Huddersfield UK
4. Department of Environmental Science Xi'an Jiaotong‐Liverpool University Suzhou China
5. U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Washington District of Columbia USA
Abstract
AbstractCoastal dunes are found along the sandy coasts of oceans, seas, and large lakes all around the world. They are dynamic landforms that evolve along complex morphological and biological continua in response to a range on controls linked to climate, sea level, sediment movement, vegetation cover, and land use. By collating research across the full spectrum of processes shaping different types and sizes of dunes and smaller aeolian bedforms, special issues can aid researchers to identify new research directions and methods emerging from the discipline. This editorial summarizes the 25 contributions to the special issue Coastal dunes: links between aeolian processes and landform dynamics. We grouped the contributions into four broad themes: (1) long‐term dune evolution, (2) short‐term aeolian transport, (3) research methods, and (4) coastal dune management. Contributions to the special issue demonstrate that research interest in coastal dunes, and particularly the impacts of human interventions on dunes, continues to grow. It also shows how aeolian research on coastal dunes covers a range of temporal and spatial scales, from ripple dynamics and instantaneous airflow‐transport processes to dune field evolution with rising sea levels and large‐scale dune stage shifts. We highlight potential avenues for future research including vegetation roughness characteristics and their effect on wind flow and sediment transport, the challenges of upscaling short‐ and small‐scale results to larger and longer spatiotemporal scales, and the study of both natural and managed dune landscapes.
Subject
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
4 articles.
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