High resolution bed level change and synchronized biophysical data from 10 tidal flats in northwestern Europe

Datacite citation style:
Hu, Zhan; Willemsen, Pim; Borsje, B.W. (Bas); C. Wang; Wang, H. (Heng) et. al. (2020): High resolution bed level change and synchronized biophysical data from 10 tidal flats in northwestern Europe. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/uuid:4830dbc2-84b8-46f9-99a3-90f01ab5b923.v1
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Dataset
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Observation sites for 'High resolution bed level change and synchronized biophysical data from 10 tidal flats in northwestern Europe'
time coverage
2013/2017
licence
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Tidal flats provide valuable ecosystem services such as flood protection and carbon sequestration. Erosion and accretion processes govern the eco-geomorphic evolution of intertidal ecosystems (marshes and bare flats), and hence substantially affect their valuable ecosystem services. To understand the intertidal ecosystem development, high-frequency bed-level change data are thus needed. However, such datasets are scarce due to the lack of suitable methods that do not involve excessive labour and/or instrument cost. By applying newly-developed Surface Elevation Dynamics sensors (SED-sensors), we obtained unique high-resolution daily bed-level change data sets in the period 2013-2017 from 10 saltmarsh sites situated in the Netherlands, Belgium and Britain in contrasting physical and biological settings. At each site, multiple sensors were deployed for 9-20 months to ensure sufficient spatial and temporal coverage of highly variable bed level change processes. The bed level change data are provided with synchronized hydrodynamic data, i.e. water level, wave height, tidal current velocity, and medium grain size (D50) as well as (for some sites) chlorophyll-a level and organic matter content of the surface sediment. This dataset has revealed diverse spatial morphodynamic patterns over daily to seasonal scales, which are valuable to theoretical and model development. On the daily scale, this dataset is particularly instructive as it includes a number of storm events, the response to which can be detected in the bed level change observations. Such data are rare but useful to study tidal flat response to highly energetic conditions.
history
  • 2020-03-25 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.Centre for Research Data
format
media types: application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml, application/vnd.ms-excel, application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document, application/x-matlab-data, application/zip, image/png, text/html, text/plain
organizations
Department of Geography, Trinity College Dublin;
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge;
Department of Physical Geography, Utrecht University;
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente;
Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Marine Resources and Coastal Engineering, and School of Marine Science, Sun Yat-sen University;
HKV Consultants;
Institute of Environmental and Ecological engineering, Guangdong University of Technology;
NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Department of Estuarine and Delta Systems and Utrecht University;
Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO);
Satellite Application Center for Ecology and Environment, Ministry of Ecology and Environment, and State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Satellite Remote Sensing;
School of Marine Engineering and Technology, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou;
Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory;
TU Delft, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences;
University of Antwerp, Ecosystem Management Research Group;
Water Engineering and Management, University of Twente

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