2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2019.106991
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Modeling wetland transitions and loss in coastal Louisiana under scenarios of future relative sea-level rise

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Cited by 39 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…The latter is limited to a depth of few meters and includes hydrological alterations (e.g., drained soil due to marsh ditching), which might accelerate carbon oxidation and soil compaction. Because deep subsidence is weakly dependent on short‐term marsh processes, it is generally simulated as a boundary condition in salt marsh models (Fagherazzi et al, 2012; Reed et al, 2020). Explicitly accounting for subsidence in a process‐based manner might be opportune when considering long time scales, (at the scales of evolution of bays and deltas and their wetlands).…”
Section: Salt Marshes and Sea Level Risementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The latter is limited to a depth of few meters and includes hydrological alterations (e.g., drained soil due to marsh ditching), which might accelerate carbon oxidation and soil compaction. Because deep subsidence is weakly dependent on short‐term marsh processes, it is generally simulated as a boundary condition in salt marsh models (Fagherazzi et al, 2012; Reed et al, 2020). Explicitly accounting for subsidence in a process‐based manner might be opportune when considering long time scales, (at the scales of evolution of bays and deltas and their wetlands).…”
Section: Salt Marshes and Sea Level Risementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This elevation loss is defined as deep subsidence. One approach is to consider the gross sediment accumulation at the surface and separately include shallow and deep subsidence into the RSLR term (e.g., Reed et al, 2020). Another approach is to consider a net vertical accretion, in which the shallow subsidence is directly subtracted from the gross accretion, while the deep subsidence is considered separately.…”
Section: Salt Marshes and Sea Level Risementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This addition of the upwinding technique greatly increased the stability of salinity predictions. Further discussion and analysis of the ICM methodology, calibration, validation, model performance and analysis are provided in the Supplementary Materials as well as several peer reviewed articles [24][25][26][30][31][32][33][34] and technical reports [35][36][37][38][39][40][41].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The FWOA run maintains the same connections between the basins and Mississippi River as the current conditions simulation. However, the 50-year simulation includes the effects of the relative sea-level rise and the changing wetland landscape within the basins [33]. Under FWOA, all basins show an increase over time in the proportion of the basin in the 2-16 ppt range, and both Pontchartrain and Breton show an increase in the area >16 ppt by year 50.…”
Section: Simulations Of Future Conditions With Varying Levels Of Fresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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