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Denise Reed Pontchartrain Institute University of New Orleans

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Presentation on theme: "Denise Reed Pontchartrain Institute University of New Orleans"— Presentation transcript:

1 Denise Reed Pontchartrain Institute University of New Orleans

2 Projected Coastal Louisiana Trends: 1956-2050
Land Loss Projected Land Loss Land Gain Projected Land Gain Land Water 1956 – sq. mi. of coastal landscape lost average rate 35 sq.mi./yr. for 44 years 2000 – 2050 Projected loss - another 513 square miles

3 The Past

4 Natural cycles 20th century Time Land Area Delta building
- River deposition Delta loss - subsidence, storms Rapid land loss Land Area Limited land building Time

5 + = Higher relative water levels Natural Subsidence
Sea-Level Rise Natural Subsidence + = Higher relative water levels Existing marshes must build up to survive

6 Can marshes keep pace with subsidence and sea-level rise?

7 Marsh Building Processes
DeLaune et al. 1990

8 How do marshes build without sediments from the river?
Storms! Increase water levels and mobilize sediment

9 Cahoon et al., 1995

10 Hurricane Dolly 22 August 1996
Fourchon 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 (m above local datum) Tide Sediment Deposition (g/cm2/day) 0.0006 0.0004 0.0002 5/7/96 5/21/96 6/4/96 6/18/96 7/2/96 7/16/96 7/30/96 8/13/96 8/27/96 Hurricane Dolly 22 August 1996 Date

11 Hurricane Lilli 2002 Reed et al., 2006

12 How Much Sediment for Maintenance?
Katrina and Rita estimated to have delivered 130 million tonnes (Turner et al., 2006)

13 River levees stop restrict delta building to a few areas
Regular sediment supply from the river to existing marshes is eliminated. Storm reworking is their only source of sediment. River levees stop restrict delta building to a few areas

14 “MRGO” Houma Navigation Channel Navigation Channels

15 Pipeline Canals

16 Solutions? Maintain what we have Rebuild what we’ve lost

17 Continuing Current Management

18 Achieving Sustainability

19 “Prevent loss of sediments
into the deep Gulf”

20 Coast 2050

21 “..large-scale concepts that
could provide significant long-term ecosystem restoration benefits”

22 Average annual loss to Gulf ~120 million tons of sediment
Photo taken by NASA April 29, 2008

23 21st Century Sea level rise accelerates…. Storm impacts increase….
Using the River gives Coastal Louisiana a fighting chance

24


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