Coastal Management - Miscellaneous:
1997 Publications
Author: Day,
J.W., Martin, J.F., Cardoch, L., and Templet, P.H.
Title: System functioning as a basis for sustainable
management of deltaic ecosystems.
Publication: Coastal Management
25(2):115-153, 1997.
© Taylor & Francis.
Notes: Deltas are
very important ecologically and economically, and much of the
would's coastal wetlands are located in deltas. These areas are in
crisis because various human impacts have led to deterioration of
deltas. In this article, we address the functioning of deltas,
human impacts in deltas, and the concept of sustainable management
of deltas. It is implicit in this discussion that only management
that is based on the functioning of deltas is sustainable. In
spite of sea-level rise and subsidence, deltas have greatly
increased in area because of riverine sediment delivery over the
past several thousand years. Recently, human impacts have altered
natural pulsing energies and sediment distribution. It is clear
that deltas are not being managed in a sustainable manner and
there is a need to move toward more sustainable management. Such
management must be based on a carefully controlled return to the
natural functioning of deltas by utilizing, rather than
diminishing, beneficial natural pulsing energies. We propose ways
to determine if deltas are geomorphically, ecologically, and
economically sustainable. The article is concluded with art EMergy
analysis to holistically test for deltaic
sustainability.
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