2012
DOI: 10.1117/12.999308
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Impact of huge tsunami in March 2011 on seaweed bed distributions in Shizugawa Bay, Sanriku Coast, revealed by remote sensing

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Tsunamis are known to cause substantial damage to coastal environments and coastal seagrass meadows [49]. Although the seagrass beds in our survey area were seriously affected by the tsunami of 2011 [50,51], the seagrass meadows have recovered to some extent. In the survey area, patches of only one species of seagrass, Zostera caulescense Miki were found on a shallow sandy bottom at depths around 6 m prior to the tsunami on 11 March 2011, and have recovered in 2014.…”
Section: Survey Areamentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Tsunamis are known to cause substantial damage to coastal environments and coastal seagrass meadows [49]. Although the seagrass beds in our survey area were seriously affected by the tsunami of 2011 [50,51], the seagrass meadows have recovered to some extent. In the survey area, patches of only one species of seagrass, Zostera caulescense Miki were found on a shallow sandy bottom at depths around 6 m prior to the tsunami on 11 March 2011, and have recovered in 2014.…”
Section: Survey Areamentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The utilization of demarcated fishery right areas has changed after the tsunami in some ria-type bays such as Shizugawa Bay ( Komatsu & Aoki, 2020 ) and Onagawa Bay ( Fujii et al, 2019 ) to reduce aquaculture facilities. Coastal ecosystems also suffered significant damage on tidal flats ( Suzuki, 2012 ) and seagrass meadows except seaweed beds ( Komatsu, 2012 ; Komatsu et al, 2015 ; Sakamoto et al, 2012 ; Sasa et al, 2012 ). The Biodiversity Center of Japan (2015) reported that the area of seagrass along the Sanriku Coast before the tsunami had decreased during the 2012–2014 monitoring period.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%