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Journal ArticleDOI

Wave and vegetation effects on flow and suspended sediment characteristics: A flume study

TLDR
In this paper, a flume experiment was performed using the pioneer plant Scirpus mariqueter and suspended sediment, and a statistical method was used to analyse the average velocity and the turbulence intensity.
Abstract
Vegetation in tidal flats can alter flow dynamics by increasing the velocity gradient and attenuating the wave energy. In this study, a flume experiment was performed using the pioneer plant Scirpus mariqueter and suspended sediment. Two cases are analysed: current-only and current-wave conditions with a regular wave. A statistical method is used to analyse the average velocity and the turbulence intensity. Results demonstrate that the plants can cause a velocity decrease in the vegetation region and an increase in the turbulence intensity below the top of the canopy. The combined effect of waves and vegetation on turbulence dramatically increases the flow velocity above the average water depth as well as the turbulence intensity profiles. In this study, the attenuation efficiency of the wave height is 0.0448 m -1 , which is identical to results using artificial plants with the same relative submerged depth. The drag force in current-wave conditions is almost twice of that observed in current-only conditions. The spectral analysis shows that only waves can influence high-frequency motion. In addition, an increase is observed in the bottom shear stress, mean grain size, and suspended concentration of the sediment during current-wave conditions.

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Optimizing Sediment Diversion Operations: Working Group Recommendations for Integrating Complex Ecological and Social Landscape Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, an expert working group was formed to explore how various operational strategies may affect the complex interactions of coastal Louisiana's ecological and social landscape and provide preliminary recommendations for further consideration and research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting the vertical low suspended sediment concentration in vegetated flow using a random displacement model

TL;DR: Based on the Lagrangian approach, a random displacement model (RDM) was proposed in this paper to predict the concentration of suspended sediment in vegetated steady open channel flow, and the simulated results were compared with available experimental measurements for uniform open-channel flows.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wave attenuation over coastal salt marshes under storm surge conditions

TL;DR: In this paper, wave flume experiments show that marsh vegetation causes substantial wave dissipation and prevents erosion of the underlying surface, even during extreme storm surge conditions, and salt marshes protect coastlines against waves.
Journal ArticleDOI

An empirical model to estimate the propagation of random breaking and nonbreaking waves over vegetation fields

TL;DR: In this paper, a model for wave transformation on vegetation fields is presented, which includes wave damping and wave breaking over vegetation fields at variable depths, based on a nonlinear formulation of the drag force, either the transformation of monochromatic waves or irregular waves can be modeled considering geometric and physical characteristics of the vegetation field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wave diffraction due to areas of energy dissipation

TL;DR: In this article, a parabolic model for calculating the combined refraction/diffraction of monochromatic linear waves is developed, including a term which allows for the dissipation of wave energy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sediment Retention by a Mediterranean Posidonia oceanica Meadow: The Balance between Deposition and Resuspension

TL;DR: The role of Posidonia oceanica in promoting sediment stability and accretion was studied in a 15 m deep meadow at Fanals Point (NW Mediterranean, Spain) by comparing particle deposition within the meadow and adjacent bare sediment as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wave Transformation Over Salt Marshes: A Field and Numerical Modelling Study from North Norfolk, England

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present quantitative evidence for the effectiveness of a meso-to macro-tidal open coast salt marsh in attenuating incoming waves over a range of tidal and meteorological conditions.
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