Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands

In the transformation from tidal systems to freshwater coastal landscapes, plants act as eco-engineering species that reduce hydrodynamics and trap sediment, but nature and timing of the mechanisms of land creation along estuaries remains unclear. This article focuses on the Old Rhine estuary (The Netherlands) to show the importance of vegetation in coastal landscape evolution, predominantly regarding tidal basin filling and overbank morphology. This estuary hosted the main outflow channel of the river Rhine between ca 6500 to 2000 cal bp, and was constrained by peat during most of its existence. This study reconstructs its geological evolution, by correlating newly integrated geological data and new field records to varying conditions. Numerical modelling was performed to test the inferred mechanisms. It was found that floodbasin vegetation and resulting organic accumulation strongly accelerated back-barrier infill, by minimizing tidal influence. After tidal and wave transport had already sufficiently filled the back-barrier basin, reed rapidly expanded from its edges under brackish conditions, as shown by diatom analysis and datings. Reed growth provided a positive infilling feedback by reducing tidal flow and tidal prism, accelerating basin infilling. New radiocarbon dates show that large-scale crevassing along the Old Rhine River – driven by tidal backwater effect – only started as nutrient-rich river water transformed the floodbasin into an Alder carr in a next phase of estuary evolution. Such less dense vegetation promotes crevassing as sediments are more easily transported into the floodbasin. As river discharge increased and estuary mouth infilling progressed, crevasse activity diminished around 3800 to 3000 cal bp, likely due to a reduced tidal backwater effect. The insights from this data-rich Holocene study showcase the dominant role that vegetation may have in the long-term evolution of coastal wetlands. It provides clues for effective use of vegetation in vulnerable wetland landscapes to steer sedimentation patterns to strategically adapt to rising water levels.

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Main Authors: Pierik, Harm Jan, Moree, Jelle I.M., van der Werf, Karianne M., Roelofs, Lonneke, Albernaz, Marcio Boechat, Wilbers, Antoine, van der Valk, Bert, van Dinter, Marieke, Hoek, Wim Z., de Haas, Tjalling, Kleinhans, Maarten G.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Estuary, Holocene, infilling, peat accumulation, vegetation,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/vegetation-and-peat-accumulation-steer-holocene-tidalfluvial-basi
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6055652024-10-02 Pierik, Harm Jan Moree, Jelle I.M. van der Werf, Karianne M. Roelofs, Lonneke Albernaz, Marcio Boechat Wilbers, Antoine van der Valk, Bert van Dinter, Marieke Hoek, Wim Z. de Haas, Tjalling Kleinhans, Maarten G. Article/Letter to editor Sedimentology 70 (2023) 1 ISSN: 0037-0746 Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands 2023 In the transformation from tidal systems to freshwater coastal landscapes, plants act as eco-engineering species that reduce hydrodynamics and trap sediment, but nature and timing of the mechanisms of land creation along estuaries remains unclear. This article focuses on the Old Rhine estuary (The Netherlands) to show the importance of vegetation in coastal landscape evolution, predominantly regarding tidal basin filling and overbank morphology. This estuary hosted the main outflow channel of the river Rhine between ca 6500 to 2000 cal bp, and was constrained by peat during most of its existence. This study reconstructs its geological evolution, by correlating newly integrated geological data and new field records to varying conditions. Numerical modelling was performed to test the inferred mechanisms. It was found that floodbasin vegetation and resulting organic accumulation strongly accelerated back-barrier infill, by minimizing tidal influence. After tidal and wave transport had already sufficiently filled the back-barrier basin, reed rapidly expanded from its edges under brackish conditions, as shown by diatom analysis and datings. Reed growth provided a positive infilling feedback by reducing tidal flow and tidal prism, accelerating basin infilling. New radiocarbon dates show that large-scale crevassing along the Old Rhine River – driven by tidal backwater effect – only started as nutrient-rich river water transformed the floodbasin into an Alder carr in a next phase of estuary evolution. Such less dense vegetation promotes crevassing as sediments are more easily transported into the floodbasin. As river discharge increased and estuary mouth infilling progressed, crevasse activity diminished around 3800 to 3000 cal bp, likely due to a reduced tidal backwater effect. The insights from this data-rich Holocene study showcase the dominant role that vegetation may have in the long-term evolution of coastal wetlands. It provides clues for effective use of vegetation in vulnerable wetland landscapes to steer sedimentation patterns to strategically adapt to rising water levels. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/vegetation-and-peat-accumulation-steer-holocene-tidalfluvial-basi 10.1111/sed.13038 https://edepot.wur.nl/582279 Estuary Holocene infilling peat accumulation vegetation https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Estuary
Holocene
infilling
peat accumulation
vegetation
Estuary
Holocene
infilling
peat accumulation
vegetation
spellingShingle Estuary
Holocene
infilling
peat accumulation
vegetation
Estuary
Holocene
infilling
peat accumulation
vegetation
Pierik, Harm Jan
Moree, Jelle I.M.
van der Werf, Karianne M.
Roelofs, Lonneke
Albernaz, Marcio Boechat
Wilbers, Antoine
van der Valk, Bert
van Dinter, Marieke
Hoek, Wim Z.
de Haas, Tjalling
Kleinhans, Maarten G.
Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
description In the transformation from tidal systems to freshwater coastal landscapes, plants act as eco-engineering species that reduce hydrodynamics and trap sediment, but nature and timing of the mechanisms of land creation along estuaries remains unclear. This article focuses on the Old Rhine estuary (The Netherlands) to show the importance of vegetation in coastal landscape evolution, predominantly regarding tidal basin filling and overbank morphology. This estuary hosted the main outflow channel of the river Rhine between ca 6500 to 2000 cal bp, and was constrained by peat during most of its existence. This study reconstructs its geological evolution, by correlating newly integrated geological data and new field records to varying conditions. Numerical modelling was performed to test the inferred mechanisms. It was found that floodbasin vegetation and resulting organic accumulation strongly accelerated back-barrier infill, by minimizing tidal influence. After tidal and wave transport had already sufficiently filled the back-barrier basin, reed rapidly expanded from its edges under brackish conditions, as shown by diatom analysis and datings. Reed growth provided a positive infilling feedback by reducing tidal flow and tidal prism, accelerating basin infilling. New radiocarbon dates show that large-scale crevassing along the Old Rhine River – driven by tidal backwater effect – only started as nutrient-rich river water transformed the floodbasin into an Alder carr in a next phase of estuary evolution. Such less dense vegetation promotes crevassing as sediments are more easily transported into the floodbasin. As river discharge increased and estuary mouth infilling progressed, crevasse activity diminished around 3800 to 3000 cal bp, likely due to a reduced tidal backwater effect. The insights from this data-rich Holocene study showcase the dominant role that vegetation may have in the long-term evolution of coastal wetlands. It provides clues for effective use of vegetation in vulnerable wetland landscapes to steer sedimentation patterns to strategically adapt to rising water levels.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Estuary
Holocene
infilling
peat accumulation
vegetation
author Pierik, Harm Jan
Moree, Jelle I.M.
van der Werf, Karianne M.
Roelofs, Lonneke
Albernaz, Marcio Boechat
Wilbers, Antoine
van der Valk, Bert
van Dinter, Marieke
Hoek, Wim Z.
de Haas, Tjalling
Kleinhans, Maarten G.
author_facet Pierik, Harm Jan
Moree, Jelle I.M.
van der Werf, Karianne M.
Roelofs, Lonneke
Albernaz, Marcio Boechat
Wilbers, Antoine
van der Valk, Bert
van Dinter, Marieke
Hoek, Wim Z.
de Haas, Tjalling
Kleinhans, Maarten G.
author_sort Pierik, Harm Jan
title Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
title_short Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
title_full Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
title_fullStr Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed Vegetation and peat accumulation steer Holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the Old Rhine River, The Netherlands
title_sort vegetation and peat accumulation steer holocene tidal–fluvial basin filling and overbank sedimentation along the old rhine river, the netherlands
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/vegetation-and-peat-accumulation-steer-holocene-tidalfluvial-basi
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