Beach erosion: Satellites reveal how climate cycles impact coastlines

Science & Nature

Science & Nature Beach erosion: satellites reveal how climate cycles impact coastlines
Beaches on the southeast coast of Australia narrow during prolonged La Niña, while they widen – or accrete – during El Niño periods. Credit: Water Research Laboratory.

Researchers from UNSW Sydney have analyzed millions of satellite photos to observe changes in beaches across the Pacific Ocean. The findings, published in Nature Geoscience today (Feb. 10), reveal for the first time how coastlines respond to different phases of the El-Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle.

ENSO is a natural climate phenomenon that causes variations in over the Pacific Ocean. The warming phase, known as El Niño, and the cooling phase, known as La Niña, affect across different coastlines depending on the cycle.

During these periods, can also intensify, shifting sand away from beaches and threatening beachfront homes and habitats. But scientists haven’t been able to study this broadly using conventional coastal monitoring techniques, which have been limited to on-ground observations on just a few beaches.

“Scientists have known beaches respond to ENSO cycles for decades, but we’ve only been able to paint a small picture of this from a few sporadic monitoring sites,” says Dr. Mitchell Harley, co-author of the study from UNSW’s Water Research Laboratory at the School of Civil & Environmental Engineering. “For this research, we were able to take a completely different angle to complete the bigger picture of how climate cycles impact entire Pacific coasts.”

Science & Nature Observing coastal changes from the cosmos

Satellites orbiting the Earth have captured images of the world’s coastlines at regular intervals for almost forty years. The researchers developed a new open-source tool called CoastSat, which combines and machine learning algorithms to extract information from every pixel about thousands of along the Pacific rim.

“The tool automatically maps the position of the interface between the sand and water. Doing this over multiple images and beaches, and correcting for the tide, we can discover changes in the coastline over a large temporal and spatial scale and how this correlates with ENSO cycles,” says Dr. Kilian Vos, lead author of the study from the Water Research Laboratory.






Credit: University of New South Wales

Using the tool, the researchers processed 38 years of Landsat satellite photos to find correlations in beach width and El Niño and La Niña cycles across more than 8000km of sandy coastline, from the east coast of Australia to the west coast of California and down to Chile.

They found that beaches on the southeast coast of Australia narrow during prolonged La Niña, while they widen—or accrete—during El Niño periods. But beaches on the other side of the Pacific experience the opposite effect—eroding during El Nino and recovering during La Niña.

“While our study is looking at the average behavior of sandy beaches correlated with the ENSO cycle, this is consistent with what we’ve observed, for example, with the recent triple-dip La Niña in Australia, where successive coastal storms have been stripping sand from beaches along the NSW and QLD coastlines,” says Dr. Vos.

Science & Nature Forecasting coastal erosion risk

The researchers say understanding the impact of ENSO cycles on different coasts of the Pacific can help coastal managers and residents anticipate coastal erosion risks and prepare with protection measures like beach nourishment.

Science & Nature Beach erosion: satellites reveal how climate cycles impact coastlines
The study can help coastal managers and residents anticipate coastal erosion risks. Credit: Water Research Laboratory

“Sandy coasts are some of the most dynamic and populated environments on the planet. In some conditions, they can completely disappear overnight and take years to come back,” Dr. Vos says.

“It’s essential we continue to monitor them through studies like this which help inform how we can manage our beaches, which provide a buffer between ocean waves and the high-value infrastructure around them.

“If you’re a tourist looking to spend a holiday on the beach, it might be worth looking at the ENSO forecast as it might give you an indication of where to expect wide sandy beaches.”

Dr. Harley also leads the CoastSnap citizen science project, where share their shoreline photos to create new insights into how beaches respond to changing conditions.

The researchers plan to further analyze the data from both projects to uncover insights on how respond to waves, sea levels and climate change as close to real-time as possible.

“Some studies suggest climate change will alter ENSO patterns, which may affect how coastlines change further, in terms of intensification of these erosion and accretion effects, or a shift in where they occur,” Dr. Harley.

“Using all these incredible data sources from space and the community, we can continue to increase our understanding of how our coastlines are changing now and in the future.”

More information:
Kilian Vos et al, Pacific shoreline erosion and accretion patterns controlled by El Niño/Southern Oscillation, Nature Geoscience (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41561-022-01117-8

Citation:
Beach erosion: Satellites reveal how climate cycles impact coastlines (2023, February 11)
retrieved 11 February 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-02-beach-erosion-satellites-reveal-climate.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Read More
Marquis Pecora

Latest

Study suggests fibroid rates in Latina women may be lower than previously thought

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

Rimas Entertainment Presents SONAR: ‘A Record Label Where Artists Can Develop with Freedom’

The label's roster includes Cris MJ, Yan Block, Hades66 and more. Jesús Rodríguez, head of label, SONAR SONAR / Rimas Entertainment Español Rimas Entertainment officially unveils SONAR, a record label focused on the development and projection of artists within the Latin music market, Billboard can announce exclusively today (April 29). The initiative is part of

YouTube’s Tuma Basa to Exit as Director of Black Music & Culture

MusicAfter eight years at the streaming giant, the...

Feza – Khanyisa

MusicDOWNLOAD MP3 SONG...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Study suggests fibroid rates in Latina women may be lower than previously thought

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

Rimas Entertainment Presents SONAR: ‘A Record Label Where Artists Can Develop with Freedom’

The label's roster includes Cris MJ, Yan Block, Hades66 and more. Jesús Rodríguez, head of label, SONAR SONAR / Rimas Entertainment Español Rimas Entertainment officially unveils SONAR, a record label focused on the development and projection of artists within the Latin music market, Billboard can announce exclusively today (April 29). The initiative is part of

YouTube’s Tuma Basa to Exit as Director of Black Music & Culture

MusicAfter eight years at the streaming giant, the...

Feza – Khanyisa

MusicDOWNLOAD MP3 SONG...

The Vogue Business Funding Tracker

Introducing the Vogue Business Funding Tracker, a running list highlighting the most notable and intriguing investment and M&A activity in fashion and beauty. From emerging disruptors to legacy giants undergoing major changes, we spotlight the deals that are shifting the dynamics of the sectors we cover, including fashion, beauty, tech and sustainability. April 2026 Icicle

Family Business? Tee Grizzley Reacts After His Mom Accuses Him Of Leaving Her To Struggle (PHOTOS)

Y’all… it looks like some family tension might be brewing behind the scenes involving Tee Grizzley and his mom. What seemed like a regular social media post quickly turned into something deeper. And now, folks are side-eyeing the situation and wondering what’s really going on. RELATED: Tee Grizzley Shares A Message For Artists After His

SoE necessary but not sufficient, business leaders say

PE­TER CHRISTO­PHER Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt Heavy hand­ed but nec­es­sary giv­en the state of crime in T&T. This was a com­mon as­sess­ment from var­i­ous busi­ness groups when asked for their per­spec­tive on the lat­est de­c­la­ra­tion of a state of emer­gency in the coun­try. The T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, in a re­leased is­sued yes­ter­day