(Press-News.org) CORVALLIS, Ore. – Newly planted vegetation on coastal sand dunes can accelerate erosion from extreme waves, a study involving researchers from the Oregon State University College of Engineering suggests.
The authors note the findings run counter to the widely accepted paradigm that vegetation always acts to reduce erosion on dunes, the first line of storm defense for landscapes that are among the world’s most ecologically important and economically valuable.
The experiments involved building beach dune profiles 70 meters long and 4.5 meters high and subjecting them to storm waves in a 104-meter-long flume at OSU’s O.H. Hinsdale Wave Research Laboratory.
Researchers spent six months growing coastal switchgrass, a common dune plant known scientifically as Panicum amarum, within the flume before beginning wave testing.
“This project required the participation of five principal investigators from different universities nationwide, about 10 coastal scientists and 15 grad students working together in our large wave flume for almost nine months,” said Pedro Lomonaco, director of the wave research lab. “Various instruments measured the wave conditions, sediment transport, underground water level changes, beach profile evolution and relevant metrics. The experiments we conducted represent a landmark for testing at a large scale.”
Findings of the study were published today in Science Advances.
The research is crucial, notes Oregon State’s Meagan Wengrove, because the United States coastline is dotted with communities trying to protect themselves from storms by planting vegetation on dunes in an attempt to make the dunes higher and more stable.
The authors say the existing body of dune research shows that vegetation size, density and diversity are associated with less erosion, but those studies have been limited to relatively small wave events over time scales measured in minutes.
“In our research we found that a newly planted coastal dune that does not have a very established root structure scarped faster than a bare dune with the same sand size and compaction,” said Wengrove, assistant professor of civil and construction engineering.
Scarping is when a sand dune, or other hillside, erodes into a steep shape that’s vertical or close to it. A scarped dune is inherently unstable, putting structures and roadways near it at risk and threatening the surrounding ecosystems.
“We still need to learn more about how different levels of vegetation establishment influence coastal dune vulnerability to wave-driven erosion, but this work is an important step toward understanding the role vegetation plays,” she said.
The collaboration led by Rusty Feagin of Texas A&M University found that while vegetation initially created a physical barrier to wave energy during a severe storm situation, it also increased water penetration into the sediment bed, which induced destabilization and sped up scarp formation.
“Once a scarp forms, the erosion accelerates even more,” Wengrove said.
Oregon State doctoral student Hailey Bond and researchers from the University of Delaware also took part in the study, which was funded by the National Science Foundation.
END
Newly planted vegetation accelerates dune erosion during extreme storms, research shows
2023-06-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Preserving forests to protect deep soil from warming
2023-06-14
A recent study led by scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of Zurich has revealed that the organic compounds proposed for carbon sequestration in deep soil are highly vulnerable to decomposition under global warming.
The finding has implications for a key strategy in carbon management that relies on soil and forests – natural carbon “sinks” – to mitigate global warming.
About 25 percent of global carbon emissions are captured by forests, grasslands, and rangelands. During photosynthesis, plants store carbon in their cell walls and in the soil. Because ...
Treatment creates steel alloys with superior strength and plasticity
2023-06-14
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — A new treatment tested on a high-quality steel alloy produces extraordinary strength and plasticity, two traits that must typically be balanced rather than combined. Ultra-fine metal grains that the treatment produced in the outermost layer of steel appear to stretch, rotate and then elongate under strain, conferring super-plasticity in a way that Purdue University researchers cannot fully explain.
The researchers treated T-91, a modified steel alloy that is used in nuclear and petrochemical ...
TCT 2023 Program Guide now available
2023-06-14
NEW YORK – June 14, 2023 – The Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) has announced the TCT 2023 Program Guide is now available. TCT is the annual scientific symposium of CRF and the world’s premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine. TCT 2023 will take place October 23-26 in San Francisco, California, at the Moscone Center and will celebrate 35 years of leading the field.
Every year, TCT features major medical research breakthroughs and gathers ...
Plate tectonics not required for the emergence of life
2023-06-14
Scientists have taken a journey back in time to unlock the mysteries of Earth’s early history, using tiny mineral crystals called zircons to study plate tectonics billions of years ago. The research sheds light on the conditions that existed in early Earth, revealing a complex interplay between Earth’s crust, core, and the emergence of life.
Plate tectonics allows heat from Earth’s interior to escape to the surface, forming continents and other geological features necessary for life to emerge. Accordingly, “there has been the assumption that plate tectonics is necessary for life,” says John Tarduno, who teaches in the Department ...
Novel research shows older breast cancer survivors experience accelerated aging, worse functional outcomes
2023-06-14
For Immediate Release
Contact
Colleen McDonald
Sr. Consultant, Earned Media - MCW
414.801.3146 | cmcdonald@mcw.edu
Milwaukee, Wis., June 14, 2023 – In a new multi-center study, researchers from the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW) joined with leading cancer centers from across the nation to examine whether cancer and its treatments accelerate aging. Using novel epigenetic measures to assess biological aging, investigators found that older breast cancer survivors – particularly those exposed to chemotherapy – showed greater epigenetic aging than their same-aged peers without cancer, which ...
The life below our feet: team discovers microbes thriving in groundwater and producing oxygen in the dark
2023-06-14
WOODS HOLE, Mass. – Nearly a third of Earth’s freshwater resources lie in groundwater – much more than in all lakes, rivers and the atmosphere combined, and exceeded only by the frozen water in polar ice caps. Accordingly, about half of humankind depends on groundwater as a source of drinking water.
Despite the global occurrence and essential importance of groundwater, however, knowledge of the organisms that inhabit it, and how they survive, remains thin.
A recent investigation led by microbial ecologist Emil Ruff of the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) has discovered ...
IEEE Photonics Society in search for Editor-in-Chief
2023-06-14
The IEEE Photonics Society invites applications and nominations for the volunteer position of Editor-in-Chief (EiC) for the IEEE Photonics Journal, delivered through IEEE’s research digital library IEEE Xplore. The term for the current EiC will end this year and the Society is conducting an open search for potential candidates.
“The IEEE Photonics Journal led the way for the IEEE, being the IEEE’s first open access journal. We’re excited to find a candidate who can lead this pioneering journal for the next term, and I encourage all qualified ...
Gemini North detects multiple rock-forming elements in the atmosphere of a scorching exoplanet
2023-06-14
WASP-76b is a strange world. Located 634 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation of Pisces, the Jupiter-like exoplanet orbits its host star at an exceptionally close distance — approximately 12 times closer than Mercury is to the Sun — which heats its atmosphere to a searing 2000°C. Such extreme temperatures have “puffed up” the planet, increasing its volume to nearly six times that of Jupiter.
At such extreme temperatures, mineral- and rock-forming elements, which would otherwise remain hidden in the atmosphere of a colder gas-giant planet, can reveal themselves.
Using ...
Network of channels tried to saturate YouTube with pro-Bolsonaro content during 2022 Brazil election
2023-06-14
Experts have identified coordinated efforts to saturate YouTube’s recommender algorithm, flooding users with pro- Bolsonaro content during the 2022 Brazil election.
Researchers from the University of Exeter and Instituto Vero have uncovered a complex, web-like influencer system of channels that shaped political narratives during this period. This is in addition to YouTube’s own recommender algorithm which also generates suggestions based on users’ viewership patterns.
This network of influencer-driven videos was promoted by mentions, tags, interviews, and cuts (shorter video formats) and heavily contributed ...
New model offers insights into how stress in neurons connects to cardiovascular disease
2023-06-14
Oxidative stress – characterized by elevated levels of unstable molecules called reactive oxygen species– is associated with neurodegeneration and cardiovascular disease. However, until recently it has not been possible to demonstrate a causal relationship between oxidative stress and disease states. A new study used “chemogenetics” to activate a recombinant yeast protein expressed in mouse tissues to manipulate levels of oxidative stress in living mice. Researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and the Novartis ...