Increased utilization of storm surge barriers: a research agenda on estuary impacts

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Date
2023-03-27
Authors
Orton, Philip
Ralston, David
Prooijen, Bram
Secor, David
Ganju, Neil
Chen, Ziyu
Fernald, Sarah
Brooks, Bennett
Marcell, Kristin
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10.1029/2022ef002991
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Abstract
Rising coastal flood risk and recent disasters are driving interest in the construction of gated storm surge barriers worldwide, with current studies recommending barriers for at least 11 estuaries in the United States alone. Surge barriers partially block estuary‐ocean exchange with infrastructure across an estuary or its inlet and include gated areas that are closed only during flood events. They can alter the stratification and salt intrusion, change sedimentary systems, and curtail animal migration and ecosystem connectivity, with impacts growing larger with increasing gate closures. Existing barriers are being used with increasing frequency due to sea level rise. New barrier proposals typically come with maximum closure frequency recommendations, yet the future adherence to them is uncertain. Given that the broader environmental effects and coupled‐human dynamics of surge barriers are not well‐understood, we present an interdisciplinary research agenda for this increasingly prevalent modification to our coastal zone.
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© The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Orton, P., Ralston, D., Prooijen, B., Secor, D., Ganju, N., Chen, Z., Fernald, S., Brooks, B., & Marcell, K. Increased utilization of storm surge barriers: a research agenda on estuary impacts. Earth’s Future, 11(3, (2023): e2022EF002991, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022ef002991.
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Orton, P., Ralston, D., Prooijen, B., Secor, D., Ganju, N., Chen, Z., Fernald, S., Brooks, B., & Marcell, K. (2023). Increased utilization of storm surge barriers: a research agenda on estuary impacts. Earth’s Future, 11(3, e2022EF002991.
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