DOI: 10.3390/su18126321 ISSN: 2071-1050

Wave Attenuation and Erosion-Risk Reduction for Sustainable Sediment Management at a Marsh-Creation Site in Coastal Louisiana

Abhishek K. Tiwari, Jay X. Wang

Coastal Louisiana continues to experience rapid wetland loss, increasing the exposure of marsh-creation containment dikes to storm-driven waves, erosion, and sediment loss. This study evaluated offshore-to-nearshore wave transformation, erosion risk reduction, wave runup, and hydrodynamic loading at a representative marsh-creation site in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. A 25-year return-period offshore wave condition was derived from long-term Wave Information Study hindcast data and propagated using the SWAN spectral wave model. Two idealized foreshore conditions were examined: a bare-bed case and a marsh-roughened shallow water case represented through enhanced bottom friction. Web Soil Survey data were used to characterize the local soil context of the containment-dike zone. The results show strong wave attenuation across the inner shelf and marsh platform. Relative to the bare-bed case, marsh roughness reduced dike toe significant wave height by 16.1–27.4% and decreased the Hs2-based erosion exposure proxy by 29.6–47.4% across three still-water levels. These reductions produced 15.4–26.4% lower 2% exceedance runup and 28.5–45.8% lower quasi-hydrostatic loading on the containment dike. The results indicate that marsh-induced dissipation can help reduce erosion potential and support sustainable coastal restoration infrastructure management.

More from our Archive