Coastal dune dynamics in response to excavated foredune notches

Publication date

2018-04

Authors

Ruessink, B.G.ORCID 0000-0001-9526-6087ISNI 0000000117053107
Arens, S. M.
Kuipers, M.
Donker, J.J.A.ISNI 0000000393474231

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Dune management along developed coasts has traditionally focussed on the suppression of the geomorphic dynamics of the foredune to improve its role in sea defence. Because a stabilized foredune acts as an almost total barrier to aeolian transport from the beach, the habitat diversity in the more landward dunes has degraded. With the overarching objective to mitigate this undesirable loss in biodiversity, dune management projects nowadays increasingly intend to restore aeolian dynamics by reconnecting the beach-dune system with notches excavated through the foredune. Here, we use repeat topographic survey data to examine the geomorphic response of a coastal dune system in the Dutch National Park Zuid-Kennemerland to five notches excavated in 2012-2013 within an 850-m stretch of the 20-m high established foredune. The notches were dug in a V-shape (viewed onshore), with a width between approximately 50 and 100m at the top, a (cross-dune) length between 100 and 200m, and excavation depths between 9 and 12.5m. The 1×1m digital terrain models, acquired with airborne Lidar and UAV photogrammetry, illustrate that during the 3-year survey period the notches developed into a U-shape because of wall deflation, and that up to 8-m thick and 150-m long depositional lobes formed landward of the notches. Sand budget computations showed that the sand volume of the entire study area increased by about 22,750m3/year, which, given the 850-m width of the study area, corresponds to an aeolian input from the beach of approximately 26.5m3/m/year. Between 2006 and 2012 all wind-blown beach sand deposited on the seaward side of the foredune; since 2013, the notches have caused 75% of the sand to be deposited landward of the foredune. This highlights that the notches are highly effective conduits for aeolian transport into the back dunes. Future monitoring is required to determine for how long the notches will stimulate aeolian dynamics and if (and when) vegetation eventually starts to regrow and enforces the degeneration of the notches.

Keywords

Airborne Lidar, Coastal dunes, Dune restoration, Foredune notches, Topographic surveys, Unmanned Aerial Vehicle, Taverne, Geology, Earth-Surface Processes

Citation

Ruessink, B G, Arens, S M, Kuipers, M & Donker, J J A 2018, 'Coastal dune dynamics in response to excavated foredune notches', Aeolian Research, vol. 31, pp. 3-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aeolia.2017.07.002