Abstract
Abstract. Coastal mangroves, thriving at the interface between land and sea, provide
robust flood risk reduction. Projected increases in the frequency and
magnitude of climate impact drivers such as sea level rise and wind and wave
climatology reinforce the need to optimize the design and functionality of
coastal protection works to increase resilience. Doing so effectively
requires a sound understanding of the local coastal system. However, data
availability particularly at muddy coasts remains a pronounced problem. As
such, this paper captures a unique dataset for the Guyana coastline and
focuses on relations between vegetation (mangrove) density, wave attenuation
rates and sediment characteristics. These processes were studied along a
cross-shore transect with mangroves fringing the coastline of Guyana. The
data are publicly available at the 4TU Centre for
Research Data (4TU.ResearchData) via
https://doi.org/10.4121/c.5715269 (Best et al., 2022) where the
collection Advancing Resilience Measures for Vegetated Coastline (ARM4VEG), Guyana, comprises of six key datasets. Suspended sediment concentrations typically exceeded 1 g L−1 with a maximum of
60 g L−1, implying that we measured merely fluid-mud conditions across a 1 m depth. Time series of wind waves and fluid-mud density variations, recorded
simultaneously with tide elevation and suspended sediment data, indicate
that wave–fluid-mud interactions in the nearshore may be largely responsible
for the accumulation of fine, muddy sediment along the coast. Sediment
properties reveal a consolidated underlying bed layer. Vegetation coverage
densities in the Avicennia-dominated forest were determined across the vertical with
maximum values over the first 20 cm from the bed due to the roots and
pneumatophores. Generalized total wave attenuation rates in the forest and along the mudflat were between 0.002–0.0032 m−1 and 0.0003–0.0004 m−1
respectively. Both the mangroves and the mudflats have a high wave-damping
capacity. The 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 wave dissipation inside the mangrove vegetation. Data collected
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 structure facilitates modelling studies
investigating the mechanisms determining the coastal defence capacities of
mangroves.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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