几天到几十年时间尺度的海岸线模型

Emily Hunt, M. Davidson, E. Steele, Jessica D. Amies, Timothy Scott, P. Russell
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引用次数: 2

摘要

气候变化正在导致全球海平面和波浪气候的变化,这在许多地方大大增加了侵蚀、洪水以及对沿海基础设施和生态系统的破坏的可能性。因此,社会迫切需要能够在广泛的时间尺度(从几天到几十年)内预测我们海岸线的形态演变,从而促进更有针对性、更适当、更具成本效益的管理干预措施和基于数据的规划,以支持沿海环境的发展。广泛的建模方法已被用于评估详细的形态演变和/或海岸侵蚀/增生的简化指标,并取得了不同程度的成功。本文概述了这些建模方法,涵盖了复杂性谱的全部范围,并总结了每种方法的优点和缺点。重点是降低复杂性的建模方法,包括基于平衡概念的模型,这些模型已成为预测几十年时间尺度上沿海变化的特别有前途的方法。稳定、计算效率高、复杂性低的模型的优点必须与在多样化和复杂的沿海环境中对良好的通用性和技能的要求相平衡。还指出了限制模式在区域和全球尺度上普遍应用的重大障碍。挑战包括在不断变化的气候中对模式强迫时间序列进行准确的长期预测,以及解释在短期内基本上可以忽略但在长期内重要性增加的过程。进一步的复杂情况包括沿海的复杂情况,例如准确评估绕过岬角的影响。其他的复杂性包括复杂的结构和地质,混合的粒度,有限的沉积物供应,来源和汇。结论是,在目前的计算资源、数据可用性限制和过程知识差距的情况下,降低复杂性的建模方法目前是在日至年代际时间尺度上模拟海岸线演变的最有希望的解决方案。
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Shoreline modelling on timescales of days to decades
Climate change is resulting in global changes to sea level and wave climates, which in many locations significantly increase the probability of erosion, flooding and damage to coastal infrastructure and ecosystems. Therefore, there is a pressing societal need to be able to forecast the morphological evolution of our coastlines over a broad range of timescales, spanning days-to-decades, facilitating more focused, appropriate and cost-effective management interventions and data-informed planning to support the development of coastal environments. A wide range of modelling approaches have been used with varying degrees of success to assess both the detailed morphological evolution and/or simplified indicators of coastal erosion/accretion. This paper presents an overview of these modelling approaches, covering the full range of the complexity spectrum and summarising the advantages and disadvantages of each method. A focus is given to reduced-complexity modelling approaches, including models based on equilibrium concepts, which have emerged as a particularly promising methodology for the prediction of coastal change over multi-decadal timescales. The advantages of stable, computationally-efficient, reduced-complexity models must be balanced against the requirement for good generality and skill in diverse and complex coastal settings. Significant obstacles are also identified, limiting the generic application of models at regional and global scales. Challenges include the accurate long-term prediction of model forcing time-series in a changing climate, and accounting for processes that can largely be ignored in the shorter term but increase in importance in the long term. Further complications include coastal complexities, such as the accurate assessment of the impacts of headland bypassing. Additional complexities include complex structures and geology, mixed grain size, limited sediment supply, sources and sinks. It is concluded that with present computational resources, data availability limitations and process knowledge gaps, reduced-complexity modelling approaches currently offer the most promising solution to modelling shoreline evolution on daily-to-decadal timescales.
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