Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats

Dredging of navigation channels in estuaries affects estuarine morphology and ecosystems. In the Western Scheldt, a two-channel estuary in the Netherlands, the navigation channel is deepened and the sediment is relocated to other parts of the estuary. We analyzed the response of an intertidal flat to sediment disposals in its adjacent channel. Decades of high-frequency monitoring data from the intertidal flat show a shift from erosion toward accretion and reveal a sequence of cascading eco-morphological consequences. We document significant morphological changes not only at the disposal sites, but also at the nearby intertidal flats. Disposals influence channel bank migration, driving changes in the evolution of the intertidal flat hydrodynamics, morphology, and grain sizes. The analyzed disposals related to an expansion of the channel bank, an increase in bed level of the intertidal flat, a decrease in flow velocities on this higher elevated flat, and locally a decrease in grain sizes. These changes in turn affect intertidal flat benthic communities (increased in quantity in this case) and the evolution of the adjacent salt marsh (retreated less or even expanded in this case). The shifts in evolution may occur years after dredged disposal begins, especially in zones of the flats farther away from the disposal locations. The consequences of sediment disposals that we identify stress the urgency of managing such interventions with integrated strategies on a system scale.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: de Vet, P.L.M., van Prooijen, B.C., Colosimo, I., Ysebaert, T., Herman, P.M.J., Wang, Z.B.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:ecology, estuaries, intertidal flats, morphology, sediment disposals, sediment management,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/sediment-disposals-in-estuarine-channels-alter-the-eco-morphology
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5629782025-01-15 de Vet, P.L.M. van Prooijen, B.C. Colosimo, I. Ysebaert, T. Herman, P.M.J. Wang, Z.B. Article/Letter to editor Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface 125 (2020) 2 ISSN: 2169-9003 Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats 2020 Dredging of navigation channels in estuaries affects estuarine morphology and ecosystems. In the Western Scheldt, a two-channel estuary in the Netherlands, the navigation channel is deepened and the sediment is relocated to other parts of the estuary. We analyzed the response of an intertidal flat to sediment disposals in its adjacent channel. Decades of high-frequency monitoring data from the intertidal flat show a shift from erosion toward accretion and reveal a sequence of cascading eco-morphological consequences. We document significant morphological changes not only at the disposal sites, but also at the nearby intertidal flats. Disposals influence channel bank migration, driving changes in the evolution of the intertidal flat hydrodynamics, morphology, and grain sizes. The analyzed disposals related to an expansion of the channel bank, an increase in bed level of the intertidal flat, a decrease in flow velocities on this higher elevated flat, and locally a decrease in grain sizes. These changes in turn affect intertidal flat benthic communities (increased in quantity in this case) and the evolution of the adjacent salt marsh (retreated less or even expanded in this case). The shifts in evolution may occur years after dredged disposal begins, especially in zones of the flats farther away from the disposal locations. The consequences of sediment disposals that we identify stress the urgency of managing such interventions with integrated strategies on a system scale. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/sediment-disposals-in-estuarine-channels-alter-the-eco-morphology 10.1029/2019JF005432 https://edepot.wur.nl/518896 ecology estuaries intertidal flats morphology sediment disposals sediment management 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 ecology
estuaries
intertidal flats
morphology
sediment disposals
sediment management
ecology
estuaries
intertidal flats
morphology
sediment disposals
sediment management
spellingShingle ecology
estuaries
intertidal flats
morphology
sediment disposals
sediment management
ecology
estuaries
intertidal flats
morphology
sediment disposals
sediment management
de Vet, P.L.M.
van Prooijen, B.C.
Colosimo, I.
Ysebaert, T.
Herman, P.M.J.
Wang, Z.B.
Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
description Dredging of navigation channels in estuaries affects estuarine morphology and ecosystems. In the Western Scheldt, a two-channel estuary in the Netherlands, the navigation channel is deepened and the sediment is relocated to other parts of the estuary. We analyzed the response of an intertidal flat to sediment disposals in its adjacent channel. Decades of high-frequency monitoring data from the intertidal flat show a shift from erosion toward accretion and reveal a sequence of cascading eco-morphological consequences. We document significant morphological changes not only at the disposal sites, but also at the nearby intertidal flats. Disposals influence channel bank migration, driving changes in the evolution of the intertidal flat hydrodynamics, morphology, and grain sizes. The analyzed disposals related to an expansion of the channel bank, an increase in bed level of the intertidal flat, a decrease in flow velocities on this higher elevated flat, and locally a decrease in grain sizes. These changes in turn affect intertidal flat benthic communities (increased in quantity in this case) and the evolution of the adjacent salt marsh (retreated less or even expanded in this case). The shifts in evolution may occur years after dredged disposal begins, especially in zones of the flats farther away from the disposal locations. The consequences of sediment disposals that we identify stress the urgency of managing such interventions with integrated strategies on a system scale.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet ecology
estuaries
intertidal flats
morphology
sediment disposals
sediment management
author de Vet, P.L.M.
van Prooijen, B.C.
Colosimo, I.
Ysebaert, T.
Herman, P.M.J.
Wang, Z.B.
author_facet de Vet, P.L.M.
van Prooijen, B.C.
Colosimo, I.
Ysebaert, T.
Herman, P.M.J.
Wang, Z.B.
author_sort de Vet, P.L.M.
title Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
title_short Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
title_full Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
title_fullStr Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
title_full_unstemmed Sediment Disposals in Estuarine Channels Alter the Eco-Morphology of Intertidal Flats
title_sort sediment disposals in estuarine channels alter the eco-morphology of intertidal flats
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/sediment-disposals-in-estuarine-channels-alter-the-eco-morphology
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