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Sediment dynamics on a subtidal reef flat of an atoll in the South China Sea.

Authors :
Li, Jin
Ashton, Andrew D.
Wang, Ya Ping
Xu, Xiaomei
Gao, Shu
Source :
Marine Geology. Jul2024, Vol. 473, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Atolls in the South China Sea comprise 15% of the world's total in area. In contrast to most reef flats in the Indo-Pacific region, which typically develop up to contemporary sea level, a significant portion of their reef flats in the South China Sea are inundated at depths of 5–20 m. To gain insights into modern processes and determine whether these subtidal reef flats are actively shaped by hydrodynamics, we carried out an in situ observation on a 12 m-deep southwest-facing reef flat over a period of 8 months. The measurements revealed a prevalence of seasonally varying waves and stable tidal currents. While the reef flat remained sheltered from the northeast monsoon (January–May), the southwest monsoon (June–September) led to prolonged reef exposure to substantial waves (mean significant wave height of 1.3 m, with an orbital velocity of 0.22 m/s on average). Such an exposure resulted in the formation of mobile bed ripples and entrainment of coarse-grained coral sands. Estimates of potential bedload transport rate indicated that the combined action of waves and currents caused material loss from the reef flat, with movement into the lagoon or down the fore-reef slope of the atoll. This sediment loss was equivalent to reef bed erosion of up to 28 mm during the observation period. As these potential losses may be compensated by coral reef growth, our measurements implied that modern sediment budgeting has played a significant role in the maintenance of subtidal reef flats, in terms of bed elevation. Hence, the deep reef flat does not necessarily belong to the previously identified give-up pattern; a balance of coral sediment supply and transport-induced loss may result in an equilibrium morphology, or a "lock-up" pattern. • Combination of wave orbital motions and oceanic currents resulted in substantial shear stresses. • Sediment on the reef flat was mobile for over 75% of the 8-month observation period. • The morphology of the subtidal reef flat was maintained by modern processes. • On the global scale, there are "lock-up" atolls, in addition to keep-up, catch-up and give-up ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00253227
Volume :
473
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Marine Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177844689
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2024.107310