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Journal ArticleDOI

Indirect Environmental Effects of Dikes on Estuarine Tidal Channels: Thinking Outside of the Dike for Habitat Restoration and Monitoring

W. Gregory Hood
- 01 Apr 2004 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 2, pp 273-282
TLDR
In this article, the authors analyzed historical photos of the Skagit River delta marshes (Washington, U.S.) and compared changes in estuarine marsh and tidal channel surface area from 1956-2000 in the Wiley Slough area of the South Fork Skagits delta, and from 1937-2000 on the North Fork delta.
Abstract
While the most obvious effects of dike construction and marsh conversion are those affecting the con- verted land (direct or intended effects), less immediately apparent effects also occur seaward of dikes (indirect or unintended effects). I analyzed historical photos of the Skagit River delta marshes (Washington, U.S.) and compared changes in estuarine marsh and tidal channel surface area from 1956-2000 in the Wiley Slough area of the South Fork Skagit delta, and from 1937-2000 in the North Fork delta. Dike construction in the late 1950s caused the loss of 80 ha of estuarine marsh and 6.7 ha of tidal channel landward of the Wiley Slough dikes. A greater amount of tidal channel surface area, 9.6 ha, was lost seaward of the dikes. Similar losses were observed for two smaller North Fork tidal channel systems. Tidal channels far from dikes did not show comparable changes in channel surface area. These results are consistent with hydraulic geometry theory, which predicts that diking reduces tidal flushing in the undiked channel remnants and this results in sedimentation. Dikes may have significant seaward effects on plants and animals associated with tidal channel habitat. Another likely indirect dike effect is decreased sinuosity in a distributary channel of the South Fork Skagit River adjacent to and downstream of the Wiley Slough dikes, compared to distributary channels upstream or distant from the dikes. Loss of floodplain area to diking and marsh conversion prevents flood energy dissipation over the marsh surface. The distributary channel has responded to greater flood energy by increasing mean channel width and decreasing sinuosity. Restoration of diked areas should consider historic habitat loss seaward of dikes, as well as possible benefits to these areas from dike breaching or removal. Habitat restoration by breaching or removal of dikes should be monitored in areas directly affected by dikes, areas indirectly affected, and distinct reference areas.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing Tidal Marsh Vulnerability to Sea-Level Rise in the Skagit Delta

TL;DR: Adaptive response to the threat of climate change related sea level rise and increased wave frequency or intensity should consider the efficacy of restoring historical distributaries and managed retreat of constrictive river levees to maximize sediment delivery to delta marshes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pattern-regulated wave attenuation by salt marshes in the Yangtze Estuary, China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored wave attenuation by salt marshes at site and transect scale, and put forward potential approaches to improve coastal defenses, and found that the two 10m-wide stripes of typical vegetation (Spartina alterniflora and Scirpus mariqueter) could attenuate wave height mostly when incident wave height was 0.22m and 0.20m, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulating the impacts of land reclamation and de-reclamation on the morphodynamics of tidal networks1

TL;DR: In this paper, the morphodynamic responses of tidal networks to anthropogenic reclamation and de-reclamation projects were investigated through a three-stage numerical simulation, in which the first stage simulated the natural dynamics of the tidal network and the second stage simulated anthropogenic deformation.
References
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Book

The Fractal Geometry of Nature

TL;DR: This book is a blend of erudition, popularization, and exposition, and the illustrations include many superb examples of computer graphics that are works of art in their own right.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fractal Geometry of Nature

TL;DR: A blend of erudition (fascinating and sometimes obscure historical minutiae abound), popularization (mathematical rigor is relegated to appendices) and exposition (the reader need have little knowledge of the fields involved) is presented in this article.
Book

Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology

TL;DR: Fluvial processes in geomorphology, Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology as discussed by the authors, fluvial processes and geomorphological processes in the field of geology.
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