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Assessing reef island response to environmental conditions on the GBR

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 14:48 authored by Sarah HamyltonSarah Hamylton, Marjetta Puotinen
Reef island cays form through the deposition of sediment as a result of wave trains converging across reef platforms and, at the regional scale, are influenced by a range of oceanographic and physical environmental factors. Preliminary results of a spatial modeling exercise applied to 103 reef islands are presented, demonstrating that variation in island area and volume can be accurately expressed as a function of latitudinal and cross-shelf gradients in regional oceanographic factors (exposure to incident waves, tidal range and the frequency of tropical cyclones) and local physical factors (position on the shelf, area of supporting reef platform, area of vegetative cover). This morphometric autoregressive model reveals important differences in the response of unvegetated cays, vegetated cays and low wooded islands to their local environmental conditions. The empirical relationships defined could further be used to simulate future island accretionary and erosional dynamics, and consequent vulnerability given information on anticipated environmental changes.

History

Citation

Hamylton, S. & Puotinen, M. (2012). Assessing reef island response to environmental conditions on the GBR. In D. Yellowlees & T. P. Hughes (Eds.), Proceedings of the 12th International coral Reef Symposium (pp. 1-5). Australia: James Cook University.

Pagination

1-5

Language

English

RIS ID

89391

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