Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies

Coral reefs provide natural coastal protection through depth-induced wave breaking and frictional dissipation on the fore reef, the reef crest, and the back reef. The coral reef roughness is a significant factor in wave attenuation through frictional dissipation and is directly linked to the reef’s...

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Main Authors: Avinash Boodoo, Deborah Villarroel-Lamb
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1525438/full
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author Avinash Boodoo
Deborah Villarroel-Lamb
author_facet Avinash Boodoo
Deborah Villarroel-Lamb
author_sort Avinash Boodoo
collection DOAJ
description Coral reefs provide natural coastal protection through depth-induced wave breaking and frictional dissipation on the fore reef, the reef crest, and the back reef. The coral reef roughness is a significant factor in wave attenuation through frictional dissipation and is directly linked to the reef’s health. The influence of reef roughness on frictional dissipation under representative conditions, and the extent to which coral reef degradation and Sea Level Rise (SLR) reduces this coastal protection service remains underexplored, especially at coastal sites in Caribbean Small Island Developing States. A numerical modelling approach using a coupled depth-averaged (2DH) hydrodynamic and spectral wave model in Delft3D was used to evaluate the coastal protection effectiveness of a fringing reef under varying scenarios of coral reef degradation and SLR at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago. Using near present day conditions as the baseline scenario, assessed wave conditions showed 100% and 96.45% reductions at low and high tides respectively. Under modelled degraded reef conditions on the reef flat, wave heights increased by an average of 21.74% compared to baseline conditions, while for modelled healthier reefs, there was an 18.9% decrease in wave heights from the baseline scenario. Using various SLR scenarios, wave heights showed increases over baseline conditions between 160.5% and 388.4% for increases in sea level from 0.25 m to 1.00 m. The results highlight the importance of the frictional dissipation provided by healthy coral reefs, with degraded corals and rising sea levels leading to substantial increases in nearshore wave heights which could exacerbate issues such as coastal erosion and flooding. Management strategies such as Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) and innovative approaches such as the deployment of artificial reefs which are specifically designed to replicate the complex structure and roughness of natural reefs can contribute to wave attenuation by frictional dissipation.
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spelling doaj-art-105e764f6f58469faad8989038dcbe4a2025-02-12T05:15:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452025-02-011210.3389/fmars.2025.15254381525438Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategiesAvinash Boodoo0Deborah Villarroel-Lamb1Department of Transdisciplinary Science and Engineering, School of Environment and Society, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, JapanDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and TobagoCoral reefs provide natural coastal protection through depth-induced wave breaking and frictional dissipation on the fore reef, the reef crest, and the back reef. The coral reef roughness is a significant factor in wave attenuation through frictional dissipation and is directly linked to the reef’s health. The influence of reef roughness on frictional dissipation under representative conditions, and the extent to which coral reef degradation and Sea Level Rise (SLR) reduces this coastal protection service remains underexplored, especially at coastal sites in Caribbean Small Island Developing States. A numerical modelling approach using a coupled depth-averaged (2DH) hydrodynamic and spectral wave model in Delft3D was used to evaluate the coastal protection effectiveness of a fringing reef under varying scenarios of coral reef degradation and SLR at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago. Using near present day conditions as the baseline scenario, assessed wave conditions showed 100% and 96.45% reductions at low and high tides respectively. Under modelled degraded reef conditions on the reef flat, wave heights increased by an average of 21.74% compared to baseline conditions, while for modelled healthier reefs, there was an 18.9% decrease in wave heights from the baseline scenario. Using various SLR scenarios, wave heights showed increases over baseline conditions between 160.5% and 388.4% for increases in sea level from 0.25 m to 1.00 m. The results highlight the importance of the frictional dissipation provided by healthy coral reefs, with degraded corals and rising sea levels leading to substantial increases in nearshore wave heights which could exacerbate issues such as coastal erosion and flooding. Management strategies such as Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) and innovative approaches such as the deployment of artificial reefs which are specifically designed to replicate the complex structure and roughness of natural reefs can contribute to wave attenuation by frictional dissipation.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1525438/fullnumerical modellingcoastal protectioncoral reef degradationsea level risefrictional dissipationcoral reef restoration
spellingShingle Avinash Boodoo
Deborah Villarroel-Lamb
Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
Frontiers in Marine Science
numerical modelling
coastal protection
coral reef degradation
sea level rise
frictional dissipation
coral reef restoration
title Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
title_full Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
title_fullStr Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
title_full_unstemmed Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
title_short Numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at The Buccoo Reef, Tobago: implications for reef restoration and management strategies
title_sort numerical modelling of the impact of coral reef degradation and sea level rise on coastal protection at the buccoo reef tobago implications for reef restoration and management strategies
topic numerical modelling
coastal protection
coral reef degradation
sea level rise
frictional dissipation
coral reef restoration
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1525438/full
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