Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/15960
Title: Changing use and hydromorphological adjustment in a coastal lagoon–estuarine system, the Ria de Aveiro, Portugal
Author: Silva, José Figueiredo da
Duck, Robert W.
Keywords: Human use
Hydromorphological regime
Ria de Aveiro, Portugal
Seagrasses
Sediments
Issue Date: 2006
Publisher: IAHS
Abstract: Today the Ria de Aveiro of northern Portugal has a hydromorphological regime in which river influence is limited to periods of flood. For most of the annual cycle, tidal currents and wind waves are the major forcing agents in this complex coastal lagoon–estuarine system. The system has evolved over two centuries from one that was naturally fluvially dominant to one that is today tidally dominant. Human influence was a trigger for these changes, starting in 1808 when its natural evolution was halted by the construction of a new inlet/outlet channel through the mobile sand spit that isolates it from the Atlantic Ocean. In consequence, tidal ranges in the lagoon increased rapidly from ~0.1 m to >1 m and continued to increase, as a result of continued engineering works and dredging, today reaching ~3 m on spring tides. Hydromorphological adjustments that have taken place include the deepening of channels, an increase in the area of inter-tidal flats, regression of salt marsh, increased tidal propagation and increased saline intrusion. Loss of once abundant submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), due to increased tidal flows, exacerbated by increased recreational activities, has been accompanied by a change from fine cohesive sediments to coarser, mobile sediments with reduced biological activity.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/15960
ISBN: 1-90150268-6
Publisher Version: http://www.proc-iahs.net/
Appears in Collections:Ria de Aveiro - Capítulo de livro



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