AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examines how a very severe tropical cyclone affects sea turtle nesting habitats and suggests management strategies to protect these areas amid changes in the coastal landscape and sediment conditions.
  • - Findings indicate that while the immediate impacts on nesting sites are short-term, long-term effects like plastic pollution and altered sediment characteristics could hinder nesting success and exacerbate flooding.
  • - Recommendations include ensuring specific cross-sectional areas for estuaries to maintain stability, as well as involving local communities in post-cyclone clean-up efforts to support the conservation of sea turtle habitats.

Article Abstract

Sea turtles are globally vulnerable due to climate change uncertainties and anthropogenic threats. The present study highlights the impacts of a very severe tropical cyclone (VSCS) on a potential sea turtle rookery and suggests management strategy for protection and conservation of rookery habitat under changing spit geomorphology. The results show that VSCS has short-term impact on rookery and spit geomorphology, while long-term precarious impact over the coastal sedimentology due to debris pollution. Study on geomorphology, sedimentology, and debris pollution indicates that plastic pollution and change in sediment characteristics are the most probable cause for failure of arribada events during post-cyclone year. Further, study identified that reduced estuary mouth and elongation of sand spit are the potential cause for coastal flooding and loss of nesting habitat. Therefore, locational stability of estuary cross-section under varying dimension of inlet channel and width are estimated for better management of uncertainties arises from the extreme events. Results of stability analysis show that observed cross Sect. (207-1728 m) is often fall within unstable regimes compared to the estimated equilibrium cross-sectional area (790-1085 m) under natural estuary condition. Considering the severity of long-shore transport and fast migration of sand spit, study further recommends cross-sectional area of magnitude (951-965 m) is highly essential while inlet channel oscillates between 3500 and 7500 m. Similarly, for siltation issues, cross-sectional area (769-969 m) is highly required for the varying dimension of estuary widths (50-600 m). In addition, involvement of local community in cleaning coast following cyclonic storm could be best approach instead of mechanical way to unalter the rookery sedimentology. This comprehensive approach addresses immediate cyclone-induced threats while promoting the long-term sustainability of sea turtle nesting habitats, offering actionable management recommendations for maintaining estuary stability and preserving critical nesting environments in face of increasing coastal disasters.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-024-35555-1DOI Listing

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