UTFacultiesETNewsSustainable coastal protection through a combination of salt marshes and dykes

Sustainable coastal protection through a combination of salt marshes and dykes

According to University of Twente PhD candidate Pim Willemsen, natural salt marshes can help to improve the strength and sustainability of traditional coastal defences. These ecosystems will expand as sea levels rise and dampen both small and large waves, thus reducing the impact on traditional coastal protection such as dykes and sea walls. Pim Willemsen will defend his thesis on this subject this Friday.

Seventy per cent of the world’s megacities (cities with more than 1.6 million inhabitants) are located in the coastal zone. The anticipated rise in sea levels and more frequent extreme weather events make it all the more essential to protect these areas against the sea. This is traditionally done with dykes and sea walls, but, according to Willemsen, these defences can be made even more effective and sustainable if salt marshes can develop in front of them. “These tidal marshes and the vegetation they support will make these coastal defences more sustainable,” says Willemsen.

Keeping pace with rising sea levels

Because they will be able to keep pace with rising sea levels, both natural and artificially created salt marshes could contribute to sustainable coastal protection. “As the sea level rises, it deposits more sand and silt on the salt marsh, causing it to expand at the same pace as the sea level rises,” explains Willemsen. “The salt marshes in turn dampen the incoming waves, even as the sea level continues to rise.” For his PhD research, Willemsen studied the effectiveness and predictability of wave attenuation by salt marshes during the average lifetime of traditional coastal defences (around 50 years).

Model and field measurements

To be able to predict the width of a salt marsh over this period of 50 years, Willemsen developed a computer model with which he could vary the average wave height and the amount of available sediment in the water. The results of his model corresponded with what he observed on old maps and photographs of salt marshes, and with his measurements of waves in existing salt marshes. The model predicts if the edge of a salt marsh will expand seawards or in fact shrink landwards and how this will affect the wave attenuation capacity of the marsh.

Figure 1: Field measurements in salt marshes

Further information

Pim Willemsen carried out his research at the Department of Water Engineering and Management (WEM; Faculty of Engineering Technology) and the Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ). His supervisors were Prof. Suzanne Hulscher (University of Twente), Prof. Tjeerd Bouma (NIOZ) and Dr Bas Borsje (University of Twente). He will defend his thesis entitled “Biogeomorphology Of Salt Marshes - Understanding The Decadal Salt Marsh Dynamics For Flood Defence on Friday 22 January 2021. This event can be followed live online.

K.W. Wesselink - Schram MSc (Kees)
Science Communication Officer (available Mon-Fri)