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      Coastal Morphodynamics and Climate Change: A Review of Recent Advances

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      Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          The shape of the coast and the processes that mold it change together as a complex system. There is constant feedback among the multiple components of the system, and when climate changes, all facets of the system change. Abrupt shifts to different states can also take place when certain tipping points are crossed. The coupling of rapid warming in the Arctic with melting sea ice is one example of positive feedback. Climate changes, particularly rising sea temperatures, are causing an increasing frequency of tropical storms and “compound events” such as storm surges combined with torrential rains. These events are superimposed on progressive rises in relative sea level and are anticipated to push many coastal morphodynamic systems to tipping points beyond which return to preexisting conditions is unlikely. Complex systems modeling results and long-term sets of observations from diverse cases help to anticipate future coastal threats. Innovative engineering solutions are needed to adapt to changes in coastal landscapes and environmental risks. New understandings of cascading climate-change-related physical, ecological, socioeconomic effects, and multi-faceted morphodynamic systems are continually contributing to the imperative search for resilience. Recent contributions, summarized here, are based on theory, observations, numerically modeled results, regional case studies, and global projections.

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          Global warming transforms coral reef assemblages

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            Future climate risk from compound events

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              Ecosystem-based coastal defence in the face of global change.

              The risk of flood disasters is increasing for many coastal societies owing to global and regional changes in climate conditions, sea-level rise, land subsidence and sediment supply. At the same time, in many locations, conventional coastal engineering solutions such as sea walls are increasingly challenged by these changes and their maintenance may become unsustainable. We argue that flood protection by ecosystem creation and restoration can provide a more sustainable, cost-effective and ecologically sound alternative to conventional coastal engineering and that, in suitable locations, it should be implemented globally and on a large scale.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JMSEGL
                Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
                JMSE
                MDPI AG
                2077-1312
                October 2023
                October 17 2023
                : 11
                : 10
                : 1997
                Article
                10.3390/jmse11101997
                03ce6ed1-0534-47b0-8e50-a5fdb2a7105d
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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