Poster Number 164
See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: The Mississippi River Delta as a Natural Laboratory for Evaluating Coastal Response to Relative Sea-Level Rise and Innovations in Transgressive Coastal Management (Posters): Shea Penland Memorial Session
Abstract:
The 2004 and 2005 land-water data sets were combined with a data set containing 2001 marsh vegetation community types in order to identify new land-water changes within marsh communities. The greatest water area increases were in the fresh marsh community (316 km2) and the intermediate marsh community (233 km2). Lesser water area increases occurred in the brackish marsh community (85 km2) and the saline marsh community(73 km2). Remnant surge flooding caused some of the increased water area in the fresh and intermediate marsh communities. However, fresh and intermediate marsh communities located near to or east of the hurricane landfalls experienced detectable surge shearing at Landsat TM spatial resolutions. Brackish and saline marsh communities appear to be more resilient to shearing than fresh and intermediate marsh communities.
The purpose of this analysis was to provide preliminary information on land area changes shortly after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Estimation of permanent losses cannot be made until several growing seasons have passed and the transitory impacts of the hurricanes are minimized.
See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: The Mississippi River Delta as a Natural Laboratory for Evaluating Coastal Response to Relative Sea-Level Rise and Innovations in Transgressive Coastal Management (Posters): Shea Penland Memorial Session