6.4.3. Deltaic Coasts
In addition to increasing erosion, many of the world's low-lying coastal
regions will be exposed to potential inundation. Deltas that are deteriorating
as a result of sediment starvation, subsidence, and other stresses are particularly
susceptible to accelerated inundation, shoreline recession, wetland deterioration,
and interior land loss (Biljsma et al., 1996; Day et al., 1997).
River deltas are among the most valuable, heavily populated, and vulnerable
coastal systems in the world. Deltas develop where rivers deposit more sediment
at the shore than can be carried away by waves. Deltas are particularly at risk
from climate changepartly because of natural processes and partly because
of human-induced stresses. Deltaic deposits naturally dewater and compact as
a result of sedimentary loading. When compaction is combined with isostatic
loading or other tectonic effects, rates of subsidence can reach 20 mm yr-1
(Alam, 1996). Human activities such as draining for agricultural development;
levee building to prevent flooding; and channelization, damming, and diking
of rivers to impede sediment transfers have made deltas more vulnerable to sea-level
rise. Examples of sediment starvation include the Rhone and Ebro deltas (Jimenez
and Sanchez-Arcilla, 1997) and polder projects in the Ganges-Brahmaputra (Jelgersma,
1996). Sediment transport by the Nile, Indus, and Ebro Rivers has been reduced
by 95% and in the Mississippi by half in the past 200 years, mostly since 1950
(Day et al., 1997). Further stress has been caused by subsurface fluid withdrawals
and draining of wetland soils. In the Bangkok area of the Chao Phraya delta,
groundwater extraction during 1960-1994 increased average relative sea-level
rise by 17 mm yr-1 (Sabhasri and Suwarnarat, 1996). Similar severe land subsidence
has been experienced in the Old Huange and Changjiang deltas of China (Chen,
1998; Chen and Stanley, 1998). In the latter case, groundwater removal was curtailed,
leading to a reduction in subsidence rates.
Where local rates of subsidence and relative sea-level rise are not balanced
by sediment accumulation, flooding and marine processes will dominate. Indeed,
Sanchez-Arcilla and Jimenez (1997) suggest that in the case of largely regulated
deltas, the main impacts of climate change will be marine-related because impacts
related to catchment areas will be severely damped by river regulation and management
policies. In such cases, significant land loss on the outer delta can result
from wave erosion; prominent examples include the Nile (Stanley and Warne, 1998),
Mackenzie (Shaw et al., 1998b), and Ganges (Umitsu, 1997). In South America,
large portions of the Amazon, Orinoco, and Paraná/Plata deltas will be
affected if sea-level rise accelerates as projected (Canziani et al., 1998).
If vertical accretion rates resulting from sediment delivery and in situ organic
matter production do not keep pace with sea-level rise, waterlogging of wetland
soils will lead to death of emergent vegetation, a rapid loss of elevation because
of decomposition of the belowground root mass, and, ultimately, submergence
and erosion of the substrate (Cahoon and Lynch, 1997).
In some situations, saltwater intrusion into freshwater aquifers also is a
potentially major problem, as demonstrated by a three-scenario climate change
and sea-level rise model study of the Nile delta (Sherif and Singh, 1999). In
other places, saltwater intrusion is already taking place (Mulrenna and Woodroffe,
1998). In the Yangtze delta, one consequence of saltwater incursion will be
that during dry seasons shortages of freshwater for agriculture are likely to
be more pronounced and agricultural yields seriously reduced particularly around
Shanghai (Chen and Zong, 1999).
6.4.4. Coastal Wetlands
An estimate by Nicholls et al. (1999) suggests that by the 2080s, sea-level
rise could cause the loss of as much as 22% of the world's coastal wetlands.
Although there would be significant regional variations (Michener et al., 1997),
such losses would reinforce other adverse trends of wetland loss resulting primarily
from direct human actionestimated by DETR (1999) to be about 40% of 1990
values by the 2080s. Stabilization scenarios developed by DETR (1999) show a
large reduction in wetland lossesto 6-7%, compared with unmitigated
emissions (13%). Two main types of tidal wetlandmangrove forest and salt
marshare considered here, although serious impacts on other coastal vegetation
types, including subtidal seagrasses, can be expected (Short and Neckles, 1999).
Mangrove forests often are associated with tropical and subtropical deltas,
but they also occur in low- to mid-latitude lagoon and estuary margins, fringing
shorelines from Bermuda in the north to northern New Zealand in the south. Mangroves
have important ecological and socioeconomic functions, particularly in relation
to seafood production, as a source of wood products, as nutrient sinks, and
for shoreline protection (Rönnbäck, 1999). Moreover, different kinds
of mangrove provide different goods and services (Ewel et al., 1998). The function
and conservation status of mangroves has been considered in special issues of
two journals, introduced by Field et al. (1998) and Saenger (1998).
Many mangrove forests are being exploited and some are being destroyed, reducing
resilience to accommodate future sea-level rise. In Thailand, 50% of mangrove
has been lost in the past 35 years (Aksornkoae, 1993); yet with greatly increased
sediment supply to the coastal zone in some places, mangrove colonization has
expanded seaward in suitable habitats (Panapitukkul et al., 1998). As for other
shore types, this example emphasizes the importance of sediment flux in determining
mangrove response to sea-level rise. Ellison and Stoddart (1991), Ellison (1993),
and Parkinson et al. (1994) suggest that mangrove accretion in low- and high-island
settings with low sediment supply may not be able to keep up with future sea-level
rise, whereas Snedaker et al. (1994) suggest that low-island mangroves may be
able to accommodate much higher rates of sea-level rise. This ability may depend
on stand composition and status (e.g., Ewel et al., 1998; Farnsworth, 1998)
and other factors, such as tidal range and sediment supply (Woodroffe, 1995,
1999; Miyagi et al., 1999). In some protected coastal settings, inundation of
low-lying coastal land may promote progressive expansion of mangroves with sea-level
rise (Richmond et al., 1997). In contrast, Alleng (1998) predicts the complete
collapse of a mangrove wetland in Jamaica under rapid sea-level rise.
The response of tidal marshes to sea-level rise is similarly affected by organic
and inorganic sediment supply and the nature of the backshore environment (Brinson
et al., 1995; Nuttle et al., 1997). In general, tidal marsh accretion
tracks sea-level rise and fluctuations in the rate of sea-level rise (e.g.,
van de Plassche et al., 1998, 1999; Varekamp and Thomas, 1998). Marsh
accretion also reflects marsh growth effects (Varekamp et al., 1999).
Bricker-Urso et al. (1989) estimate a maximum sustainable accretion rate
of 16 mm yr-1 in salt marshes of Rhode Island (assuming that vertical
accretion rates are controlled mainly by in situ production of organic matter);
this rate is an order of magnitude higher than rates reported by others. Orson
et al. (1998) also emphasizes the effects of variability between marsh
species types.
Temporal and spatial variability in rates of relative sea-level rise also is
important. Stumpf and Haines (1998) report rates of >10 mm yr-1
in the Gulf of Mexico over several years, where the long-term mean rate of relative
sea-level rise is 2 mm yr-1 or less. Forbes et al. (1997b)
report multi-year fluctuations in sea-level rise at Halifax, Nova Scotia, of
as much as 10 mm yr-1 and occasionally higher, superimposed on a
long-term mean of 3.6 mm yr-1. Thus, short-term fluctuations in sea-level
rise may approach the maximum limit of accretion, although the drowning of marsh
surfaces is unlikely to be a major concern. Higher local rates of sea-level
change have been recorded over the past 100 years or so in a few places, one
of which is the Caspian Sea. Here, the response of riparian vegetation to the
sea-level fall in the early part of the 20th century was a rapid seaward progression
of vegetation. This progression ceased with the rise in Caspian sea level averaging
120 mm yr-1 from 1978 to 1996, but it did not result in a similar
rapid regression of vegetation. Instead, the vegetation consolidated its position,
which has been partly explained by the wide flooding tolerance of the major
emergent plant species, with floating vegetation increasing in extent with more
favorable (higher water level) conditions (Baldina et al., 1999).
In some areas, the current rate of marsh elevation gain is insufficient to
offset relative sea-level rise. For instance, model results from a wetland elevation
model designed to predict the effect of an increasing rate of sea-level rise
on wetland sustainability in Venice Lagoon revealed that for a 0.48-m rise in
the next 100 years, only one site could maintain its elevation relative to sea
level; for a 0.15-m rise, seven sites remained stable (Day et al., 1999).
Maintenance of productive marsh area also depends on horizontal controls discussed
by Nuttle et al. (1997) and Cahoon et al. (1998). For example, in settings with
sufficient sediment influx, the wetland may expand toward the estuary, while
also expanding landward if the backshore slope is sufficiently low and not backed
by fixed infrastructure (Brinson et al., 1995). If sediment supply is low, however,
marsh front erosion may occur (Dionne, 1986).
Although determining the threshold for such erosion is difficult, this erosion
is regarded as a negative impact on many wetlands, particularly those constrained
by artificial structures on the landward side. Nicholls and Branson (1998) use
the term "coastal squeeze" to describe the progressive loss and inundation
of coastal habitats and natural features located between coastal defenses and
rising sea levels. They believe that intertidal habitats will continue to disappear
progressively, with adverse consequences for coastal biological productivity,
biodiversity, and amenity value. Where sediment influx is insufficient to sustain
progradation, there is potential for significant loss of coastal wetlands. After
considering two "what if" climate change scenarios, Mortsch (1998)
found that key wetlands around the Great Lakes of Canada-USA are at riskparticularly
those that are impeded from adapting to the new water-level conditions by artificial
structures or geomorphic conditions.
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