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Predicted effects of climate change and sea level rise on water table levels and dune slack habitats

Predicted effects of climate change and sea level rise on water table levels and dune slack habitats
Predicted effects of climate change and sea level rise on water table levels and dune slack habitats
Slack floors in dune systems are important for biodiversity, but are dynamic in their characteristics, both spatially and in time. Slack floors can be characterised as dry, partly wet or flooded, depending on the water table levels and in each case they can support differing vegetation and animal species. This paper examines the effects of changes in water table levels on the location of wet slack floors in the Aindsale NNR. A groundwater model is used to calculate the water table levels on a month by month basis based on climatic, hydrological and vegetation conditions. Detailed topographic survey data at 2m grid intervals from LIDAR imagery are used to represent the ground surface in the slack floors. The expected slack type (dry, damp, flooded) is generated by intersecting the LIDAR digital terrain model with the predicted water table levels. The model has been used to calculate the distribution and frequency of occurrence of the various slack floor types between 1972 and 2004. The UKCIP’02 climate change predictions have been used to estimate the future extent and size of flooded slack floors at Ainsdale up to the year 2100.
Clarke, D.
9746f367-1df2-4e0e-8d71-5ecfc9ddd000
Clarke, D.
9746f367-1df2-4e0e-8d71-5ecfc9ddd000

Clarke, D. (2008) Predicted effects of climate change and sea level rise on water table levels and dune slack habitats. Changing Perspectives in Coast Dune Management, Liverpool, UK. 31 Mar - 03 Apr 2008.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Slack floors in dune systems are important for biodiversity, but are dynamic in their characteristics, both spatially and in time. Slack floors can be characterised as dry, partly wet or flooded, depending on the water table levels and in each case they can support differing vegetation and animal species. This paper examines the effects of changes in water table levels on the location of wet slack floors in the Aindsale NNR. A groundwater model is used to calculate the water table levels on a month by month basis based on climatic, hydrological and vegetation conditions. Detailed topographic survey data at 2m grid intervals from LIDAR imagery are used to represent the ground surface in the slack floors. The expected slack type (dry, damp, flooded) is generated by intersecting the LIDAR digital terrain model with the predicted water table levels. The model has been used to calculate the distribution and frequency of occurrence of the various slack floor types between 1972 and 2004. The UKCIP’02 climate change predictions have been used to estimate the future extent and size of flooded slack floors at Ainsdale up to the year 2100.

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More information

Published date: April 2008
Venue - Dates: Changing Perspectives in Coast Dune Management, Liverpool, UK, 2008-03-31 - 2008-04-03

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 53051
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/53051
PURE UUID: 70928ea4-e6ba-44e0-b9ac-d09cbf381038
ORCID for D. Clarke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5433-5258

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Aug 2008
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:31

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