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Puget Sound Coastal Geomorphology Background materials for NearPRISM discussion of Puget Sound shoreline geomorphology September 11, 2000 Hugh Shipman WA Dept of Ecology Questions • How is nearshore biology impacted by changes in sediment supply associated with a large landslide or with shoreline armoring? • How do geomorphological processes affect landscape-scale ecological processes (e.g. migratory pathways, eelgrass patchiness)? • Are there predictable relationships between geomorphological process, beach substrate, and biological community? Puget Sound • 2000 miles of shoreline • Narrow, steep nearshore zone • Significant lateral heterogeneity – Geology and geomorphology – Wave exposure and tidal conditions – Hydrology (rivers, streams, groundwater) • Nearshore ecology linked to shoreline geomorphological process Nearshore • Def: Top of bluff to limit of photic zone • Distinct geomorphological regimes - river deltas, barrier beaches, rocky shores, and open bluff-backed coast • Wave action determined by local wind field and shoreline shape/bathymetry • Dominance of longshore sediment movement • Mixed gravel and sand beaches • Complex beach hydrology (e.g. seeps) Puget Sound Shoreline Sediment transport • Sources – Bluff erosion vs. Fluvial – Highly variable, often coarse sediment • Longshore Transport – Low transport rates, particle size dependence – Major factor in geomorphological variability • Sediment sinks – Spits, lagoons and flats, deep water • Littoral cells Keuler, 1988 Shoreline modification issues • • • • Armoring Nourishment Docks and piers Riparian changes • Shoreline Guidelines • Endangered Species Act Shoreline Armoring • Loss of littoral sediment • Wave reflection/scour • Hydrological impacts • Loss of riparian vegetation • Passive erosion • Cumulative impact Modified shoreline [DNR, 1998] Ecology = f ( Physical Processes) • Topography – elevation, slope • Sediment structure – substrate, particle size • Sediment dynamics – turnover, disturbance • Hydrology – estuaries, seepage • Geochemistry Beach Models • Longshore sediment movement – Long-term changes to the nearshore tied to changes in longshore sediment supply • Beach sediment dynamics – Short-term changes in beach state related to waves and tides Sediment Budget model • Address beach processes over 100s-1000s meters and over years to centuries (Large Scale Coastal Behavior) • Important for evaluating questions relevant to coastal managers • Useful for addressing landscape-scale ecological questions (e.g. habitat distribution) • Model “currency” is sediment - possibly reflecting behavior of different particle sizes • Model cells might be segments of shoreline UPLAND Shoreline armoring, hydrologic modifications Bluff erosion Streams Dunes and backshore Rivers NEARSHORE Longshore Transport Upper Beach Longshore Transport Lower Beach Groins, jetties Tide Flats Small estuaries Deep Water OFFSHORE Beach Dynamics model • Address changes in beach sediment at a scale of centimeters to meters, and over time periods of hours, storms, or seasons. • Important to understanding relationship between sediment, biological, and chemical processes. • Links to other PRISM modules (oceans, nutrients) • Model “currency” is chemical constituent (e.g. carbon) • Model cell is a unit area (1-10 meters square?) Information Sources • Limited literature on estuarine and mixed gravel/sand beaches • Little observational data on Puget Sound • Limited knowledge of geomorphologicalbiological interactions outside of large river deltas