Tag: marsh

  • Where Fresh and Salty Meet

    Where Fresh and Salty Meet

    Waterways twist through the wetlands of Adair Bay in this astronaut-captured image of northwestern Mexico. The estuary marks the transition between the Great Altar Desert and the Gulf of California. Fresh and salt water mix in the sediment-rich waterways. Mangroves and other salt-tolerant vegetation flourish in the coastal marsh. During low tides, evaporating water leaves behind salt flats, seen here in gray and white. High tides flood the area with nutrients that support both the vegetation and abundant aquatic life. (Image credit: NASA; via NASA Earth Observatory)

  • Marshland Wave Damping

    Marshland Wave Damping

    Coastal marshes are a critical natural defense against flooding. The flexible plants of the marsh both slow the water’s current and help damp waves. As a result of that hydrodynamic dissipation, marshes help protect against erosion and reduce the magnitude of flooding events. But coastal managers looking to maintain or improve their marshes in order to mitigate climate-change-driven storms need to be able to predict what level of vegetation they need.

    To that end, a team of researchers has built a new model to better capture the flow effects of marsh grasses. Building from an individual, flexible plant (as opposed to a rigid cylinder, as grass is often represented), the authors constructed a model able to predict wave dissipation for many marsh configurations, which should help better predict the infrastructure changes needed in different coastal regions. (Image credit: T. Marquis; research credit: X. Zhang and H. Nepf; via APS Physics)