Seafloor morphology and habitats of tidal channels in the Venice Lagoon, Italy tidal channel habitats

Author(s):  
Fantina Madricardo ◽  
Giacomo Montereale-Gavazzi ◽  
Marco Sigovini ◽  
Aleksandra Kruss ◽  
Carlotta Toso ◽  
...  
2002 ◽  
Vol 59 (8) ◽  
pp. 1418-1427 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Gregory Hood

The use of hydraulic geometry and other geomorphic indices has been recommended for habitat restoration and creation of estuarine tidal channels. Although such an approach provides design guidance for tidal channel form, it does not provide guidance for the ecological consequences of channel form. This study investigates the potential linkage of the scaling of tidal channel form with ecological patterns and processes in estuarine tidal channels of the lower Chehalis River, Washington, U.S.A. Ebb tide surface velocity was related to channel size, as was exit time and export probability of tiny drogues, which mimic floating allochthonous detritus. Consequently, the amount of organic material in channel sediments scaled negatively with channel size as did the abundance of benthic surface deposit feeders. These observations suggest that the highest concentrations of fish feeding in estuarine tidal channels may be in smaller channels or in the smaller and more distal portions of large channels. Scaling of ecological patterns and processes with tidal channel size may be an example of a more general ecological scaling with landscape form, i.e., landscape allometry.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andressa Lima Ferreira ◽  
Helenice Vital ◽  
Moab Gomes ◽  
Andre Aquino da Silva ◽  
Yoe Perez

<p>The Galinhos-tidal-channel system is located in the Brazilian equatorial margin, northeastern coast of Rio Grande do Norte State. The economic importance of the region began around 1600s and continues until today with salt exports, later shrimp farms, handmade fishing, oil and gas industry, ecotourism and wind energy. A spit, behind which an intricate system of tidal channels has developed, with practically absent riverine influence, characterizes the area. The integration of interferometric sonographic data (total of 4.7 km<sup>2</sup>), calibrated with sediment samples, and radar images were used to map geomorphological features on the area.  The ALOS PALSAR image, allowed to integrate the altitude information of the emerged and submerged portions, resulting in efficient method for coastal flooding areas and substrate mapping. The sonographic study allowed recognizing bedforms, which are important morphological elements that influence water and sediment discharge. Four main types of submerged geomorphic units were identified: a) 2D sandy dunes, b) 3D sandy dunes c) muddy flatbeds and d) irregular beds. Dunes were classified according to their size into small, medium and large. Bathymetric data revealed that depths from 2 to 8 m along the area. The main tidal channel Galinhos has a width of 900m, 12km long, irregular bottom, and asymmetrical margins. The Pisa Sal tidal channel has an average width of 150m and 3km long, U shaped cross-section, slight asymmetric margins and slightly irregular bottom. Deepest parts occurs close to its mouth (between 6,5m and 8m), gradually decreasing until they reach 5m on its inner portion. The Tomaz tidal channel, until to central portion has an asymmetrical bed with the highest depths on its right side reaching 7m. Its left side range from 5.5m to 6m. In the south portion, this channel becomes shallower (5m) and its asymmetry is reversed. After splitting the channel width is reduced from 260m to 140m and the bottom becomes less irregular and flat sometimes. In this portion, the highest depths reach 7m. The data made it possible to identify the regions of higher and lower altitudes using as reference the mean sea level. Altitudes throughout the region range from 0 (sea level) to 20m and come from local topographic elevation. The south portion concentrates altitudes above 10m and the lower regions are located in the central portion of the area. The central portion is the flattest and this behaviour extends over 5km to the dunes located in the Galinhos spit, when the altitudes exceed values above 10m. The Galinhos spit integrates an area with average altitude ranging from two to seven m. Flooded or wet regions were well delimited due to non-penetration or absorption of electromagnetic energy (low frequency) when it interacts with the water dynamics; however, results are better where the depth is higher than 3m.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (12) ◽  
pp. 1505-1513
Author(s):  
Tjebbe M. Hepkema ◽  
Huib E. de Swart ◽  
Abdel Nnafie ◽  
George P. Schramkowski ◽  
Henk M. Schuttelaars

AbstractThe role of the Coriolis effect in the initial formation of bottom patterns in a tidal channel is studied by means of a linear stability analysis. The key finding is that the mechanism generating oblique tidal sand ridges on the continental shelf is also present in confined tidal channels. As a result, the Coriolis effect causes the fastest growing pattern to be a combination of tidal bars and oblique tidal sand ridges. Similar as on the continental shelf, the Coriolis-induced torques cause anticyclonic residual circulations around the ridges, which lead to the accumulation of sand above the ridges. Furthermore, an asymptotic analysis indicates that the maximum growth rate of the bottom perturbation is slightly increased by the Coriolis effect, while its preferred wavelength is hardly influenced.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (18) ◽  
pp. 2983
Author(s):  
Limin Sun ◽  
Dongdong Shao ◽  
Tian Xie ◽  
Weilun Gao ◽  
Xu Ma ◽  
...  

Rapid invasion of Spartina alterniflora in coastal wetlands throughout the world has attracted much attention. Some field and imagery evidence has shown that the landward invasion of S. alterniflora follows the tidal channel networks as the main pathway. However, the specific patterns and processes of its invasion in salt marshes in relation to tidal channel networks are still unclear. Based on yearly satellite images from 2010 to 2018, we studied the patterning relationship between tidal channel networks and the invasion of S. alterniflora at the south bank of the Yellow River Estuary (SBYRE). At the landscape (watershed and cross-watershed) scale, we analyzed the correlation between proxies of tidal channel network drainage efficiency (unchanneled flow lengths (UFL), overmarsh path length (OPL), and tidal channels density (TCD)) and spatial distribution of S. alterniflora. At the local (channel) scale, we examined the area and number of patches of S. alterniflora in different distance buffer zones outward from the tidal channels. Our results showed that, overall, the invasion of S. alterniflora had a strong association with tidal channel networks. Watershed with higher drainage efficiency (smaller OPL) attained larger S. alterniflora area, and higher-order (third-order and above) channels tended to be the main pathway of S. alterniflora invasion. At the local scale, the total area of S. alterniflora in each distance buffer zones increased with distance within 15 m from the tidal channels, whereas the number of patches decreased with distance as expansion stabilized. Overall, the S. alterniflora area within 30 m from the tidal channels remained approximately 14% of its entire distribution throughout the invasion. The results implicated that early control of S. alterniflora invasion should pay close attention to higher-order tidal channels as the main pathway


Author(s):  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Zeng Zhou ◽  
Liang Geng ◽  
Giovanni Coco ◽  
Jianfeng Tao ◽  
...  

A state-of-the-art morphodynamic model (Delft3D) was used to explore the effects of bathymetric perturbation on the morphodynamic modeling of tidal channels and flats. Short-term and medium-term modeling results indicate that the two-way interaction of the hydrodynamic forcing and initial perturbation has influence on the evolution of tidal channel ontogeny. There is a critical range of the magnitude of initial perturbation, within which the morphodynamic development tends to be similar. By comparing with the case without initial perturbation, the case with a slight increase in perturbation magnitude can considerably enhance the rate of the morphodynamic development.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fantina Madricardo ◽  
Federica Foglini ◽  
Aleksandra Kruss ◽  
Christian Ferrarin ◽  
Nicola Marco Pizzeghello ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alfonso Miguel Jiménez-Robles ◽  
Stefano Lanzoni ◽  
Miguel Ortega-Sánchez

This contribution investigates the morphodynamic equilibrium of a funnel-shaped, well-mixed tidal channel taking into account the existing dynamical coupling between the tidal channel itself and the related offshore sediment-laden plume. We use a quasi two-dimensional numerical model that resolves the fully nonlinear unsteady shallow water, sediment bed load transport and suspended sediment advection-diffusion equations along with the Exner equation for the bathymetric changes. We close this model by including a dynamic boundary condition at the channel mouth that transfers the offshore plume sediment concentration to the channel dynamics. This model reveals that the offshore plume reduces the timescales to reach equilibrium of the channel and plays a crucial role on shaping it. At equilibrium, the non-plume influence case attains a quasi-linear profile of constant slope in the seaward part. However, the bottom profile in the case that includes the offshore plume tends to increase the concavity of the bottom profile, reducing the final channel mouth depth. Finally, numerical results suggest that the plume characteristics are altered as a consequence of tidal channel evolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1.2) ◽  
pp. 1-35
Author(s):  
Massimiliano Ghinassi ◽  
Andrea D'Alpaos ◽  
Alvise Finotello ◽  
Sonia Silvestri ◽  
Elena Bellizia ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curt D Peterson ◽  
Sandy Vanderburgh

The late-Holocene (5–0 ka) record of accommodation space controls of tidal channel and tidal flat deposition in the shallow mesotidal wave-dominated Grays Harbor estuary (236 km2 surface area) was investigated in previously reported drill cores (n=15) and new vibracores (n=20), reaching 3–10 m depth subsurface. Continuous vibracore facies sequences (3–4 m depth subsurface) discriminate between tidal channel and tidal flat deposition and demonstrate responses of both depositional settings to interseismic uplift and coseismic subsidence (1±0.5 m vertical) from cyclic neotectonic forcing (200–800 yr recurrence intervals) in the Cascadia subduction zone. Vibracore channel samples, at 0.5 m or 1.0 m depth intervals, were analyzed for sediment grain size (sample n=124) and sand source mineralogy (sample n=67). The mean and standard deviation of sand size in the sand fraction is 175±x34 1σ µm. Sediment 14C dates (n=29) range from 376 to 6,579 median calyrBP and establish long-term sedimentation rates in subtidal channel accretionary banks (average 4.2 m ka-1), intertidal channel accretionary banks (average 3.7 m ka-1), and tidal flats (average 1.1 m ka-1). Tidal channel accretionary bank deposition largely reflects reworking of pre-existing estuary deposits. Long-term total basin sediment accumulation rates (232x106 m3 ka-1) are tied to rates of net sea level rise (1.0 m ka-1) or increasing basin accommodation space. In latest Holocene time (3–0 ka) littoral sand import (117x106 m3 ka-1) was about twice as large as the retention of river sand and mud in the estuary. The selective export of winnowed mud from the estuary provided the necessary accommodation space for the import of littoral sand in latest-Holocene time. Shallow intertidal settings in Grays Harbor (60% by surface area) are maintained by self-regulating conditions of channelized sediment import, wind-wave erosion of tidal flats, and tidal prism forcing of tidal channel discharge. Hind-casted wind-wave bottom orbital velocities (>20 cm sec-1) are sufficient to truncate tidal flat elevations to lower-intertidal levels, which maintain substantial tidal prism volumes (modern MLLW-MHHW ~6.1 x 108 m3) and associated tidal channel discharge in the shallow estuary. Net sediment deposition in the estuary is controlled by the interaction of limiting accommodation space controls in the tidal flats and tidal channels. The balance between sediment supply, energy of sediment transport/resuspension, and sediment export has survived small changes in relative sea level (1±0.5 m) from cyclic neotectonic forcing. However, the prehistoric (natural) balance could be altered by future anthropogenic impacts from sustained global sea level rise (> 1.5 m during the next century) or diminished wind-wave fetch distances, which could result from tidal flat diking/filling or uncontrolled spread of non-native invasive stabilizing sea grass (Spartina). In this regard, the susceptibilities of prehistorically-balanced sediment dynamics in Grays Harbor serve as warning for other similar mesotidal wave-dominated estuaries that could be impacted by future global sea level rise, changing sediment inputs, and/or tidal flat diking/filling, which could reduce intertidal habitat and associated ecosystem functions. 


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