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Resilience of branching and massive corals to wave loading under sea level rise: A coupled computational fluid dynamics-structural analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2018-10-25, 00:00 authored by TE Baldock, H Karampour, R Sleep, A Vyltla, Faris Albermani, A Golshani, DP Callaghan, G Roff, PJ Mumby
Measurements of coral structural strength are coupled with a fluid dynamics-structural analysis to investigate the resilience of coral to wave loading under sea level rise and a typical Great Barrier Reef lagoon wave climate. The measured structural properties were used to determine the wave conditions and flow velocities that lead to structural failure. Hydrodynamic modelling was subsequently used to investigate the type of the bathymetry where coral is most vulnerable to breakage under cyclonic wave conditions, and how sea level rise (SLR) changes this vulnerability. Massive corals are determined not to be vulnerable to wave induced structural damage, whereas branching corals are susceptible at wave induced orbital velocities exceeding 0.5 m/s. Model results from a large suite of idealised bathymetry suggest that SLR of 1 m or a loss of skeleton strength of order 25% significantly increases the area of reef flat where branching corals are exposed to damaging wave induced flows.

Funding

Other

History

Volume

86

Issue

1-2

Start Page

91

End Page

101

Number of Pages

11

ISSN

0025-326X

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

University of Queensland; Griffith University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Marine Pollution Bulletin

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