Coastal Management: A Review of Key Elements for Vulnerability Assessment

Author:

Cruz-Ramírez Cesia J.1,Chávez Valeria1ORCID,Silva Rodolfo1ORCID,Muñoz-Perez Juan J.2ORCID,Rivera-Arriaga Evelia3

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Ingeniería, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Mexico City 04510, Mexico

2. Centro Andaluz Superior de Estudios Marinos (CASEM), Universidad de Cadiz, Rio San Pedro s/n, 11510 Puerto Real, Spain

3. Centro EPOMEX, Universidad Autónoma de Campeche, Av. Agustin Melgar y Juan de la Barrera, Cd. Universitaria, Apartado Postal 520, Campeche 24020, Mexico

Abstract

Damaging and accelerated anthropization in coastal areas, as well as the need to adapt to climate change, means we must concentrate on improving management plans based on the diagnoses provided by coastal studies. Among these studies is the vulnerability assessment, obtained from evaluating a set of variables or indicators, which contribute to sustainable development. Since there is no single list of variables to consider in determining coastal vulnerability, 60 vulnerability studies from a period of 29 years (1994–2023), from across the globe, were consulted, and through a statistical mode method, the variables most used by multidisciplinary authors were identified. These studies were organized into groups: ecological, geomorphological, maritime climate, socioeconomic and legislative; creating sets categorized as the minimum indispensable, acceptable, and ideal variables. The results showed that most studies use between six and seven variables from only the maritime climate and geomorphological information groups. The number of variables used by individual studies, on the other hand, was not directly related to the scales (global, national, regional, local), but to the risks, such as flooding and erosion, it resolved. Only two studies included the minimum essential information for the legislative group, which is the presence of protected natural areas. Coastline displacements was the variable most used (43 studies), followed by the geoform type and the rate of sea level change (36), the wave regime (35) and the tidal range (33). The DSSs (Decision Support Systems) for coastal management were also reviewed, showing that these systems focus on a topic with a greater number of variables.

Funder

CONACYT-SENER-Sustentabilidad Energética project

Centro Mexicano de Innovación en Energía del Océano

Publisher

MDPI AG

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