Frontiers in Marine Science (Oct 2015)

Challenges in transferring knowledge between scales in coastal sediment dynamics

  • Shari L Gallop,
  • Shari L Gallop,
  • Michael eCollins,
  • Michael eCollins,
  • Charitha Bandula Pattiaratchi,
  • Matthew John Eliot,
  • Cyprien eBosserelle,
  • Marco eGhisalberti,
  • Lindsay Boyd Collins,
  • Ian eEliot,
  • Paul L.A. Erftemeijer,
  • Piers eLarcombe,
  • Piers eLarcombe,
  • Ionan eMarigomez,
  • Tanya eStul,
  • David John White

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2015.00082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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‘Packaging’ coastal sediment transport into discrete temporal and spatial scale bands is necessary for measurement programs, modelling, and design. However, determining how to best measure and parameterize information, to transfer between scales, is not trivial. An overview is provided of the major complexities in transferring information on coastal sediment transport between scales. Key considerations that recur in the literature include: interaction between sediment transport and morphology; the influence of biota; episodic sediment transport; and recovery time-scales. The influence of bedforms and landforms, as well as sediment-biota interactions, varies with spatio-temporal scale. In some situations, episodic sediment dynamics is the main contributor to long-term sediment transport. Such events can also significantly alter biogeochemical and ecological processes, which interact with sediments. The impact of such episodic events is fundamentally influenced by recovery time-scales, which vary spatially. For the various approaches to scaling (e.g., bottom-up, aggregation, spatial hierarchies), there is a need for fundamental research on the assumptions inherent in each approach.

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