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      InSAR-Based Mapping of Tidal Inundation Extent and Amplitude in Louisiana Coastal Wetlands

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      Remote Sensing
      MDPI AG

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          Sea-Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century

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            Space geodesy: Subsidence and flooding in New Orleans

            It has long been recognized that New Orleans is subsiding and is therefore susceptible to catastrophic flooding. Here we present a new subsidence map for the city, generated from space-based synthetic-aperture radar measurements, which reveals that parts of New Orleans underwent rapid subsidence in the three years before Hurricane Katrina struck in August 2005. One such area is next to the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet (MRGO) canal, where levees failed during the peak storm surge: the map indicates that this weakness could be explained by subsidence of a metre or more since their construction.
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              Beyond just sea-level rise: considering macroclimatic drivers within coastal wetland vulnerability assessments to climate change.

              Due to their position at the land-sea interface, coastal wetlands are vulnerable to many aspects of climate change. However, climate change vulnerability assessments for coastal wetlands generally focus solely on sea-level rise without considering the effects of other facets of climate change. Across the globe and in all ecosystems, macroclimatic drivers (e.g., temperature and rainfall regimes) greatly influence ecosystem structure and function. Macroclimatic drivers have been the focus of climate change-related threat evaluations for terrestrial ecosystems, but largely ignored for coastal wetlands. In some coastal wetlands, changing macroclimatic conditions are expected to result in foundation plant species replacement, which would affect the supply of certain ecosystem goods and services and could affect ecosystem resilience. As examples, we highlight several ecological transition zones where small changes in macroclimatic conditions would result in comparatively large changes in coastal wetland ecosystem structure and function. Our intent in this communication is not to minimize the importance of sea-level rise. Rather, our overarching aim is to illustrate the need to also consider macroclimatic drivers within vulnerability assessments for coastal wetlands.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Remote Sensing
                Remote Sensing
                MDPI AG
                2072-4292
                May 2016
                May 07 2016
                : 8
                : 5
                : 393
                Article
                10.3390/rs8050393
                9d563f2c-624e-4067-8a03-426bbce71cee
                © 2016

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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