Abstract

Urban Mediterranean beaches are often characterized by a fragile and unstable equilibrium that can be easily altered by ongoing climate change and by the increase in human pressure. This may pose serious threats to the survival of beach systems that cannot accommodate these modifications. In this paper, the spatio-temporal shift of the shoreline was investigated along two urban beaches in the Gulf of Cagliari (Poetto and Giorgino; southern Sardinia, western Mediterranean Sea) across a time frame of 62 years (1954–2016). The Digital Shoreline Analysis System (DSAS) ArcGIS™ extension was used to extract different statistical parameters which allowed us to quantify the erosion and accretion rates. These data were further examined in relation to a number of anthropic and natural forcings in order to disentangle the factors controlling shoreline evolution. Eight sectors with interchanging net erosive and accretion trends were identified along the Poetto and Giorgino beaches. In six decades, some sectors of the two study sites appeared to have undergone great shoreline modification as a result of the intense anthropogenic activities impacting these coastal areas. The westernmost portions of both beaches were found to be the most vulnerable to erosion processes; such conditions were likely controlled by the interplaying of local hydrodynamics and by the intense coastal development which affected these sectors. The highest retreat rates (mean end point rate (EPR) = −0.51/year) were recorded in the western limit of Giorgino beach. Along the western limit of Poetto beach, EPR erosion rates (mean EPR = −2.92/year) considerably increased in the years after the artificial beach nourishment carried out in 2002, suggesting that the majority of the nourished material was lost offshore or partly redistributed along the beach. Coastal structures, urban development, river catchment modification, industrial and port activities, beach cleaning and touristic and recreational activities have been identified as the ongoing causes of coastal alteration. If these factors remain constant, under projected climate change scenarios, these beaches are at risk of further increased flooding and erosion. In this context, the application of DSAS appeared as an essential tool, supporting a monitoring system able to provide understanding and, potentially, predictions of the short- to long-term evolution of these beach systems.

Highlights

  • Urban beaches are dynamic environments characterized by the complex interactions of bio-physical, human and socio-economic forces [1,2]

  • For coastal–marine ecosystems, SDG14 aims at the conservation and sustainable use of the oceans, seas and marine resources; SDG15 calls for the conservation, restoration and sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems and their services, including coastal dune systems, and promotes the integration of ecosystem and biodiversity values into national and local planning; SDG13 promotes urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts, by strengthening resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related disasters

  • In order to differentiate shoreline evolution under natural sediment supply conditions from artificially nourished settings, aerial photos acquired from 1954 to 1998 and from 2003 to 2016, over the Poetto beach, were analyzed separately; whereas, for Giorgino beach, analyses were carried out considering the whole temporal dataset

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Summary

Introduction

Urban beaches are dynamic environments characterized by the complex interactions of bio-physical, human and socio-economic forces [1,2]. These coastal areas provide key economic functions and ecological services. They represent protection from storms and flooding and act as barriers to physical forcing [3] These vulnerable ecosystems need to be adequately managed and protected and it is essential to understand erosion hazards and causes [4,5]. Such principles of management and protection are embedded in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 2030 [6]. For coastal–marine ecosystems, SDG14 aims at the conservation and sustainable use of the oceans, seas and marine resources; SDG15 calls for the conservation, restoration and sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems and their services, including coastal dune systems, and promotes the integration of ecosystem and biodiversity values into national and local planning; SDG13 promotes urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts, by strengthening resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related disasters (erosion, flooding, storm surges and sea level rise)

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