Abstract

The volume of material required for the construction of new and expansion of existing beach sites is an important parameter for coastal management. This information may play a crucial role when deciding which beach sites to develop. This work examines whether artificial neural networks (ANNs) can predict the spatial variability of nourishment requirements on the Croatian coast. We use survey data of the nourishment volume requirements and gravel diameter from 2016 to 2020, fetch length, beach area and orientation derived from national maps which vary from location to location due to a complex coastal configuration on the East Adriatic coast, and wind, tide, and rainfall data from nearby meteorological/oceanographic stations to train and test ANNs. The results reported here confirm that an ANN can adequately predict the spatial variability of observed nourishment volumes (R and MSE for the test set equal 0.87 and 2.24 × 104, respectively). The contributions of different parameters to the ANN’s predictive ability were examined. Apart from the most obvious parameters like the beach length and the beach areas, the fetch length proved to be the most important input contribution to ANN’s predictive ability, followed by the beach orientation. Fetch length and beach orientation are parameters governing the wind wave height and direction and hence are proxies for forcing.

Highlights

  • Beaches greatly interest coastal managers because of their touristic value

  • This study has shown that the artificial neural networks (ANNs) and observation data can be used to adequately predict the observed spatial variability of gravel nourishment volumes on Croatian beaches

  • The results of this study show that an ANN can adequately predict the observed gravel nourishment volume spatial variability on Croatian beaches on unseen data

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Summary

Introduction

Beaches greatly interest coastal managers because of their touristic value. Coastal managers in Croatia are interested in expanding existing beaches and building new artificial beaches to accommodate the growing number of tourists. Croatian beaches are relatively small in comparison to other European beaches, with a mean length of 370 m and a maximal length of 4200 m. The average portion of material used for nourishment is small and equals approximately 0.35 m3 /m of the beach length per year. The current practice along the Croatian coast is to maintain and enlarge these beaches using beach nourishment with gravel taken from nearby rivers and rock quarries. In Croatia, beach nourishment takes place usually in spring after the material is lost due to winter storms. The volume needed for nourishment is estimated by local authorities based on previous experience related to erosion on some specific location and visual observation of the beach geometry

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