Abstract
Aerial photographs and field studies have revealed a rapid deterioration of salt marshes in Jamaica Bay, New York. Past studies have linked marsh deterioration to sediment supply, water quality, storms, and sea level rise. Yet ship wakes and their potential impacts on marsh edge erosion are not understood. Here, we study ship wake transformation in Jamaica Bay and their potential impacts on salt marsh erosion. We apply short-time, Fourier transform (spectrogram) on existing water level measurements collected during 2015 and 2016. Our analysis reveals the existence of typical wake components. Among the observed wake components is a long wave component which propagates over shallow areas where short wind waves do not reach. We further implement a phase-resolving wave model to study wake transformation in the vicinity of salt marsh islands Little Egg and Big Egg and the consequent morphological changes. The selected marshes are located near a deep shipping channel and a ferry station, making them exposed to wakes of vessels with different size and sailing speed. A series of numerical experiments show that ship wakes can result in erosion spots near the border of deep shipping channels and their banks, i.e., edges of mudflats and marsh substrates. We show that the cumulative erosion increases rapidly with the number of vessels that pass through the study area. For instance, the magnitude of final bed erosion after the passage of 10 vessels is two to three times larger than that after the passage of five vessels.
Highlights
Jamaica Bay—a back-bay in New York City—has increasingly lost its wetlands over the past decades
We studied the characteristics of ship wakes in Jamaica Bay by conducting short-time Fourier transform, spectrogram analysis using existing measurements of water surface levels
Our analysis showed the existence of various wake components including leading wave component (LW) and low frequency component (LW) along the typical kelvin wake, divergent, and transvers components
Summary
Jamaica Bay—a back-bay in New York City—has increasingly lost its wetlands over the past decades. Salt marshes in the bay have lost 0.4% of their area per year between 1924 and 1974, 1.4% per year between 1974 and 1994, and 3.0% per year between 1994 and 1999 [1]. Previous studies have linked the salt marsh erosion to sea level rise, insufficient sediment supply, and storm surges and waves [2,3,4,5,6,7]. The effects of manmade causes such as ship wakes are not studied yet. We hypothesize that ship wakes are a non-negligible cause of salt marsh erosion in Jamaica Bay. Here, we analyze measurements and perform numerical experiments to gain a first-order understanding of the characteristics of ship wakes in Jamaica Bay and their potential impacts on marsh erosion
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