Sean P. McGill , Rachel L. Bain , Dylan M. Robinson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Beach nourishment is the leading coastal protection technique in the United States to combat erosion, enhance resilience to storm surge, and maintain recreational value. Despite these benefits, anecdotal reports suggest that beach nourishments elevate the surf zone hazard to beach patrons by steepening the beach face and altering the shoreface morphology such that conditions are more favorable for rip current formation. This study analyzes lifeguard rescue reports collected on the United States Atlantic Coast before and after a 2019 beach nourishment in Virginia Beach, Virginia, to assess whether the nourishment was correlated with an increased hazard to beach patrons. The data indicate that regardless of nourishment status, rescues were most probable during periods of high rip current probability (moderate to large wave heights and low-obliquity wave angles), along with low water level. To formally quantify pre-versus post-nourishment hazards, the proportion of rescues observed in nourished versus unnourished beach zones was compared with bootstrapped distributions of the pre-nourishment rescue proportions. Although the proportion of rescues in the nourished section of the beach exceeds the pre-nourishment average, it is not outside the overall range of pre-nourishment values obtained by random resampling. Consequently, there is insufficient evidence to conclude that the existing coastal management beach nourishment strategy increased the hazard to beach patrons at Virginia Beach.
期刊介绍:
Ocean & Coastal Management is the leading international journal dedicated to the study of all aspects of ocean and coastal management from the global to local levels.
We publish rigorously peer-reviewed manuscripts from all disciplines, and inter-/trans-disciplinary and co-designed research, but all submissions must make clear the relevance to management and/or governance issues relevant to the sustainable development and conservation of oceans and coasts.
Comparative studies (from sub-national to trans-national cases, and other management / policy arenas) are encouraged, as are studies that critically assess current management practices and governance approaches. Submissions involving robust analysis, development of theory, and improvement of management practice are especially welcome.