Twilley Robert R, Bentley Samuel J, Chen Qin, Edmonds Douglas A, Hagen Scott C, Lam Nina S-N, Willson Clinton S, Xu Kehui, Braud DeWitt, Hampton Peele R, McCall Annabeth
Coastal Studies Institute, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA.
College of the Coast and Environment, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA.
Sustain Sci. 2016;11(4):711-731. doi: 10.1007/s11625-016-0374-4. Epub 2016 May 26.
River deltas all over the world are sinking beneath sea-level rise, causing significant threats to natural and social systems. This is due to the combined effects of anthropogenic changes to sediment supply and river flow, subsidence, and sea-level rise, posing an immediate threat to the 500-1,000 million residents, many in megacities that live on deltaic coasts. The Mississippi River Deltaic Plain (MRDP) provides examples for many of the functions and feedbacks, regarding how human river management has impacted source-sink processes in coastal deltaic basins, resulting in human settlements more at risk to coastal storms. The survival of human settlement on the MRDP is arguably coupled to a shifting mass balance between a deltaic landscape occupied by either land built by the Mississippi River or water occupied by the Gulf of Mexico. We developed an approach to compare 50 % isopleths ( is ratio of land to water) across the Atchafalaya and Terrebonne Basins to test landscape behavior over the last six decades to measure delta instability in coastal deltaic basins as a function of reduced sediment supply from river flooding. The Atchafalaya Basin, with continued sediment delivery, compared to Terrebonne Basin, with reduced river inputs, allow us to test assumptions of how coastal deltaic basins respond to river management over the last 75 years by analyzing landward migration rate of 50 % isopleths between 1932 and 2010. The average landward migration for Terrebonne Basin was nearly 17,000 m (17 km) compared to only 22 m in Atchafalaya Basin over the last 78 years ( < 0.001), resulting in migration rates of 218 m/year (0.22 km/year) and <0.5 m/year, respectively. In addition, freshwater vegetation expanded in Atchafalaya Basin since 1949 compared to migration of intermediate and brackish marshes landward in the Terrebonne Basin. Changes in salt marsh vegetation patterns were very distinct in these two basins with gain of 25 % in the Terrebonne Basin compared to 90 % decrease in the Atchafalaya Basin since 1949. These shifts in vegetation types as ratio decreases with reduced sediment input and increase in salinity also coincide with an increase in wind fetch in Terrebonne Bay. In the upper Terrebonne Bay, where the largest landward migration of the 50 % ratio isopleth occurred, we estimate that the wave power has increased by 50-100 % from 1932 to 2010, as the bathymetric and topographic conditions changed, and increase in maximum storm-surge height also increased owing to the landward migration of the ratio isopleth. We argue that this balance of land relative to water in this delta provides a much clearer understanding of increased flood risk from tropical cyclones rather than just estimates of areal land loss. We describe how coastal deltaic basins of the MRDP can be used as experimental landscapes to provide insights into how varying degrees of sediment delivery to coastal deltaic floodplains change flooding risks of a sinking delta using landward migrations of 50 % isopleths. The nonlinear response of migrating isopleths as wind fetch increases is a critical feedback effect that should influence human river-management decisions in deltaic coast. Changes in land area alone do not capture how corresponding landscape degradation and increased water area can lead to exponential increase in flood risk to human populations in low-lying coastal regions. Reduced land formation in coastal deltaic basins (measured by changes in the land:water ratio) can contribute significantly to increasing flood risks by removing the negative feedback of wetlands on wave and storm-surge that occur during extreme weather events. Increased flood risks will promote population migration as human risks associated with living in a deltaic landscape increase, as land is submerged and coastal inundation threats rise. These system linkages in dynamic deltaic coasts define a balance of river management and human settlement dependent on a certain level of land area within coastal deltaic basins ().
全球各地的河流三角洲都在海平面上升的影响下下沉,对自然和社会系统构成重大威胁。这是由于沉积物供应、河流流量、地面沉降和海平面上升等人为变化的综合影响造成的,对5亿至10亿居民构成了直接威胁,其中许多人生活在三角洲海岸的大城市中。密西西比河三角洲平原(MRDP)为许多功能和反馈提供了示例,说明了人类对河流的管理如何影响沿海三角洲盆地的源汇过程,导致人类住区更容易受到沿海风暴的影响。MRDP上人类住区的生存可以说与密西西比河建造的陆地或墨西哥湾占据的水域所构成的三角洲景观之间不断变化的质量平衡有关。我们开发了一种方法,比较阿查法拉亚盆地和特雷伯恩盆地的50%等值线(陆地与水的比例),以测试过去六十年的景观行为,将沿海三角洲盆地的三角洲不稳定性作为河流洪水沉积物供应减少的函数进行测量。与河流输入减少的特雷伯恩盆地相比,有持续沉积物输送的阿查法拉亚盆地使我们能够通过分析1932年至2010年间50%等值线的向陆迁移率,来测试沿海三角洲盆地在过去75年中对河流管理的响应假设。在过去78年中,特雷伯恩盆地的平均向陆迁移距离近17000米(17公里),而阿查法拉亚盆地仅为22米(<0.001),迁移率分别为每年218米(0.22公里/年)和<0.5米/年。此外,自1949年以来,阿查法拉亚盆地的淡水植被有所扩张,而特雷伯恩盆地的中盐沼和微咸沼泽则向陆迁移。这两个盆地盐沼植被模式的变化非常明显,自1949年以来,特雷伯恩盆地增加了25%,而阿查法拉亚盆地减少了90%。随着沉积物输入减少和盐度增加,植被类型的这些变化与特雷伯恩湾风程的增加也相吻合。在特雷伯恩湾上游,50%比例等值线向陆迁移最大的地方,我们估计,由于水深和地形条件的变化,1932年至2010年间波浪功率增加了50%-100%,并且由于比例等值线的向陆迁移,最大风暴潮高度也增加了。我们认为,这个三角洲陆地与水的这种平衡,能让我们更清楚地了解热带气旋带来的洪水风险增加,而不仅仅是陆地面积损失的估计。我们描述了如何将MRDP的沿海三角洲盆地用作实验景观,以深入了解向沿海三角洲洪泛平原输送不同程度的沉积物如何通过50%等值线的向陆迁移来改变下沉三角洲的洪水风险。随着风程增加,迁移等值线的非线性响应是一种关键的反馈效应,应该会影响三角洲海岸的人类河流管理决策。仅陆地面积的变化并不能反映相应的景观退化和水域增加如何导致低洼沿海地区人类洪水风险呈指数级增加。沿海三角洲盆地陆地形成的减少(通过陆地与水的比例变化来衡量),会通过消除极端天气事件期间湿地对波浪和风暴潮的负面反馈,显著增加洪水风险。随着与生活在三角洲景观相关的人类风险增加,因为土地被淹没且沿海洪水威胁上升,洪水风险增加将促使人口迁移。动态三角洲海岸中的这些系统联系定义了河流管理与人类住区之间的一种平衡,这种平衡取决于沿海三角洲盆地内一定水平的陆地面积()。