Title
Subsidence reveals potential impacts of future sea level rise on inhabited mangrove coasts
Author
van Bijsterveldt, Celine E.J. (NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research; Universiteit Utrecht; Wageningen University & Research)
Herman, P.M.J. (TU Delft Environmental Fluid Mechanics; Deltares)
van Wesenbeeck, B (TU Delft Coastal Engineering; Deltares)
Ramadhani, Sri (NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research; Universiteit Utrecht)
Heuts, Tom S. (NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research; Universiteit Utrecht; Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen)
van Starrenburg, Corinne (NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research; Universiteit Utrecht)
Tas, S.A.J. (TU Delft Environmental Fluid Mechanics; Boston University)
Triyanti, Annisa (Universiteit Utrecht)
Helmi, Muhammad (Universitas Diponegoro)
Date
2023
Abstract
Human-induced land subsidence causes many coastal areas to sink centimetres per year, exacerbating relative sea level rise (RSLR). While cities combat this problem through investment in coastal infrastructure, rural areas are highly dependent on the persistence of protective coastal ecosystems, such as mangroves and marshes. To shed light on the future of low-lying rural areas in the face of RSLR, we here studied a 20-km-long rural coastline neighbouring a sinking city in Indonesia, reportedly sinking with 8–20 cm per year. By measuring water levels in mangroves and quantifying floor raisings of village houses, we show that, while villages experienced rapidly rising water levels, their protective mangroves experience less rapid changes in RSLR. Individual trees were able to cope with RSLR rates of 4.3 (95% confidence interval 2.3–6.3) cm per year through various root adaptations when sediment was available locally. However, lateral retreat of the forest proved inevitable, with RSLR rates up to four times higher than foreshore accretion, forcing people from coastal communities to migrate as the shoreline retreated. Whereas local RSLR may be effectively reduced by better management of groundwater resources, the effects of RSLR described here predict a gloomy prospect for rural communities that are facing globally induced sea level rise beyond the control of local or regional government.
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http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:c28d02c4-40b0-414c-926c-1f4cd5502a07
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-023-01226-1
Embargo date
2024-04-02
Source
Nature Sustainability, 6 (12), 1565-1577
Bibliographical note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.
Part of collection
Institutional Repository
Document type
journal article
Rights
© 2023 Celine E.J. van Bijsterveldt, P.M.J. Herman, B van Wesenbeeck, Sri Ramadhani, Tom S. Heuts, Corinne van Starrenburg, S.A.J. Tas, Annisa Triyanti, Muhammad Helmi, More Authors