1. Human and Hurricane Impacts to Mangroves Modulate Overwash Deposition to a Back-Barrier Lagoon.
- Author
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Griswold, Frances, Matos-Llavona, Pedro I., Woodruff, Jonathan D., and Yellen, Brian C.
- Subjects
HURRICANE Maria, 2017 ,LANDFALL ,MANGROVE forests ,GROUND vegetation cover ,LAGOONS ,MANGROVE plants - Abstract
Previous work identified hurricane deposits in the back-barrier lagoon of Laguna Playa Grande (LPG) in Vieques, Puerto Rico, dating back over 5000 years, with periods of increased storm-induced overwash activity attributed to variability in regional hurricane climatology. In 2017, Hurricane Maria made direct landfall on LPG just below category 5 strength, providing the opportunity to revisit the site to improve upon interpretations of storm-induced deposition. Maria caused widespread wave-induced overwash of the barrier beach and extensive mangrove mortality with roughly a 40% reduction in vegetative cover along the barrier. Sediment trapping and overwash deposition occurred within ripped up and broken mangrove debris during the hurricane, which prevented sediments from being carried further landward into the lagoon. Thus, no measurable overwash deposition was observed in the larger, western portion of the lagoon where previous hurricane reconstructions are derived. Significant overwash deposition (1–27 cm thick) was observed in the smaller, eastern portion of the lagoon where human cut paths through the mangroves allowed for unobstructed flow. Early historical photos support 53% reduced vegetation in 1936 followed by revegetation towards present day that prevented sandy overwash deposits from Maria in the western side, explaining the discrepancy between previously observed hurricane overwash record compared to restricted deposition solely to locations with modern footpaths for Maria. Hurricanes occurring during the recovery-revegetation phase of such storms likely result in greater overwash deposition in back-barrier lagoons due to less barrier vegetation relative to periods with robust mangrove vegetation cover. Results highlight the important role of fringing mangrove forests in flood mitigation, and the vulnerability of back-barrier environments to enhanced flooding following both anthropogenic and event-driven vegetation loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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