Relating accretion and erosion at an exposed tidal wetland to the bottom shear stress of combined current-wave action

B. W. Shi, S. L. Yang, Y. P. Wang, T. J. Bouma, Q. Zhu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

86 Scopus citations

Abstract

Sediment dynamics have an important influence on the morphological evolution of tidal wetlands, which consist of mudflats and salt marshes. To understand the nature of sediment behavior under combined current-wave action at an exposed tidal wetland, we measured the waves, currents, water depths, bed-level changes, and sediment properties at a mudflat-salt marsh transition on the Yangtze Delta, China, during five consecutive tides under onshore winds of ~8m/s, and calculated the bed shear stresses due to currents (τc), waves (τw), combined current-wave action (τcw), and the critical shear stress for erosion of the bottom sediment (τce). The bed shear stresses under combined current-wave action (τcw) were approximately five times higher on the mudflat (up to 1.11N/m2; average 0.27N/m2) than on the salt marsh (up to 0.14N/m2; average, 0.06N/m2). On the mudflat, τcw was larger than the critical erosion shear stress (τce=0.103N/m2) for 70% of the period of submergence, whereas τcw was always lower than τce at the salt marsh site (τce=0.116N/m2). This result indicates that the sediment dynamics on the mudflat were dominated by erosion, whereas at the salt marsh they were governed by deposition, which is in agreement with the observed bed-level change during the study period (-3.3mm/tide on the mudflat and 3.0mm/tide on the salt marsh). A comparison of τcw values calculated using the van Rijn (1993) and Soulsby (1995) models for bed shear stresses under combined current-wave action indicates that both models are applicable to the present case and effectively predict the bottom shear stress under combined current-wave action. Overall, we conclude that τcw in combination with τce is useful in assessing the hydrodynamic mechanisms that underlie the morphological evolution of exposed tidal wetlands.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)380-389
Number of pages10
JournalGeomorphology
Volume138
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2012

Keywords

  • Combined current-wave action
  • Mudflat
  • Salt marsh
  • Sediment dynamics
  • Shear stress
  • Tidal wetland

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Relating accretion and erosion at an exposed tidal wetland to the bottom shear stress of combined current-wave action'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this