Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective

Most assessments of coastal vulnerability are undertaken from the perspective of the risk posed to humans, their property and activities. This anthropocentric view is based on widespread public perception (a) that coastal change is primarily a hazard to property and infrastructure and (b) that sea d...

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Main Authors: J. A. G. Cooper, Derek W. T. Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00260/full
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author J. A. G. Cooper
J. A. G. Cooper
Derek W. T. Jackson
author_facet J. A. G. Cooper
J. A. G. Cooper
Derek W. T. Jackson
author_sort J. A. G. Cooper
collection DOAJ
description Most assessments of coastal vulnerability are undertaken from the perspective of the risk posed to humans, their property and activities. This anthropocentric view is based on widespread public perception (a) that coastal change is primarily a hazard to property and infrastructure and (b) that sea defenses (whether soft or hard) are required to mitigate and eliminate coastal hazards. From the perspective of coastal ecosystems, such a view is both perverse and damaging. In this paper we present an alternative approach to coastal assessment that centers on the physical integrity of the coast and its associated ecosystems both now and in the near-future. The shoreline health approach represents a new paradigm for coastal management and is intended to provide a much-needed ecosystem perspective. Its premise is to categorize coasts on the degree to which their ability to function morphodynamically has been compromised by human intervention. We present an expert assessment approach involving five categories that range from “Good Health” (with “Health Warning” and “Minor Wounds” sub-divisions), through “Minor Injury,” “Major Injury,” “On Life Support” to “Deceased.” We illustrate the concept using tabulated examples of each category from cliffed, clastic and delta coasts and demonstrate its utility through two applications. This approach has the potential to quantify the degree to which coastal ecosystems have been damaged and to focus attention on the cumulative impact of human activities on coastal ecosystems.
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spelling doaj.art-4ca6f385810f400c9fda0712dcc42b0f2022-12-21T23:44:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632019-10-01710.3389/feart.2019.00260454177Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health PerspectiveJ. A. G. Cooper0J. A. G. Cooper1Derek W. T. Jackson2School of Geography and Environmental Science, Ulster University, Coleraine, United KingdomDiscipline of Geology, School of Agriculture, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of KwaZulu – Natal, Durban, South AfricaSchool of Geography and Environmental Science, Ulster University, Coleraine, United KingdomMost assessments of coastal vulnerability are undertaken from the perspective of the risk posed to humans, their property and activities. This anthropocentric view is based on widespread public perception (a) that coastal change is primarily a hazard to property and infrastructure and (b) that sea defenses (whether soft or hard) are required to mitigate and eliminate coastal hazards. From the perspective of coastal ecosystems, such a view is both perverse and damaging. In this paper we present an alternative approach to coastal assessment that centers on the physical integrity of the coast and its associated ecosystems both now and in the near-future. The shoreline health approach represents a new paradigm for coastal management and is intended to provide a much-needed ecosystem perspective. Its premise is to categorize coasts on the degree to which their ability to function morphodynamically has been compromised by human intervention. We present an expert assessment approach involving five categories that range from “Good Health” (with “Health Warning” and “Minor Wounds” sub-divisions), through “Minor Injury,” “Major Injury,” “On Life Support” to “Deceased.” We illustrate the concept using tabulated examples of each category from cliffed, clastic and delta coasts and demonstrate its utility through two applications. This approach has the potential to quantify the degree to which coastal ecosystems have been damaged and to focus attention on the cumulative impact of human activities on coastal ecosystems.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00260/fullcoastal morphodynamicscoastal riskecosystem – based managementsea – level changecoastal managementSouth Africa
spellingShingle J. A. G. Cooper
J. A. G. Cooper
Derek W. T. Jackson
Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
Frontiers in Earth Science
coastal morphodynamics
coastal risk
ecosystem – based management
sea – level change
coastal management
South Africa
title Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
title_full Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
title_fullStr Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
title_short Coasts in Peril? A Shoreline Health Perspective
title_sort coasts in peril a shoreline health perspective
topic coastal morphodynamics
coastal risk
ecosystem – based management
sea – level change
coastal management
South Africa
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00260/full
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