Abstract

Globally, coastal communities are impacted by hazards including storm events, rising water levels, and associated coastal erosion. These hazards destroy homes and infrastructure causing human and financial risks for communities. At the same time, the economic and governance capacity of these communities varies widely, impacting their ability to plan and adapt to hazards. In order to identify locations vulnerable to coastal hazards, knowledge of the physical coastal changes must be integrated with the socio-economic profiles of communities. To do this, we couple information about coastal erosion rates and economic data in communities along the Great Lakes to develop a typology that summarizes physical and economic vulnerability to coastal erosion. This typology classifies communities into one of four categories: (1) High physical and economic vulnerability to coastal erosion, (2) High physical but low economic vulnerability to coastal erosion, (3) Low physical and low economic vulnerability to coastal erosion, and (4) High economic but low physical vulnerability to coastal erosion. An analysis of this typology over three time periods (2005–2010), (2010–2014), and (2014–2018) reveals the dynamic nature of vulnerability over this fourteen year time span. Given this complexity, it can be difficult for managers and decision-makers to decide where to direct limited resources for coastal protection. Our typology provides an analytical tool to proactively address this challenge. Further, it advances existing work on coastal change and associated vulnerability in three ways. One, it implements a regional, analytical approach that moves beyond case study-oriented work and facilitates community analyses in a comparative context. Two, the typology provides an integrated assessment of vulnerability that considers economic vulnerability to coastal erosion, which is a contextual variable that compounds or helps mitigate vulnerability. Three, the typology facilitates community comparisons over time, which is important to identifying drivers of change in Great Lakes coastal communities over time and community efforts to mitigate and adapt to these hazards.

Highlights

  • Coastlines around the world are experiencing rapid and dramatic climatic and environmental changes

  • We use this framework to analyze the spatiotemporal dynamics of coastal erosion risk along the coast of Michigan to answer the following research questions: How dynamic is coastal erosion risk over time? What are the drivers of this risk? What is the geographic variability in risk drivers? We explore these questions by documenting patterns of coastal erosion and socio-economic vulnerability in 19 coastal communities in the State of Michigan since 2005

  • The first panel of this figure displays a map of coastal erosion vulnerability

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Coastlines around the world are experiencing rapid and dramatic climatic and environmental changes These changes are increasing physical and socio-economic vulnerability to coastal hazards [1]. Great Lakes shores experience coastal hazards including fluctuating water levels, storm waves and surges, and resulting beach, dune, and bluff erosion [4]. These hazards pose threats to the nearly 34 million people in the U.S and Canada who rely on the lakes for many things including tourism, industrial and commercial activities, and drinking water [5,6]. In February of 2020, four of the five Great Lakes posted record setting lake levels [7,8]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call