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Collaborative Research project

Enhancing Coastal Resilience through Thin Layer Placement

June 20, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Research Update: Innovative Sensor Deployment to Save New Jersey Wetlands
June 11, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Network for Engineering With Nature (N-EWN) Inaugural Partner’s Symposium
May 23, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
New Book Showcases Nature-Based Solutions Around the World
April 25, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Advancing Nature-Based Solutions: A Key Focus for US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
April 24, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Surveying Beneficial Use of Dredged Material Placement Sites at the Philadelphia District
April 17, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Signed: A New Memorandum of Understanding with the National Institute of Standards and Technology to Collaboratively Quantify Nature’s Benefits for Human Well-Being
April 2, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
EWN Podcast reaches 50k download milestone!!!
April 1, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
Join ERDC Live this week with EWN's Dr. King & Dr. Tritinger
March 26, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
National Nature Assessment Chapter Leadership Team Announced
March 25, 2024
PROJECT UPDATE:
EWN Bolsters Army Resilience Efforts

Project Information

Critical to saltmarsh restoration is understanding the physical and ecological drivers of
degradation and fragmentation in saltmarsh ecosystems. Physical and ecological
processes of a broad range of spatiotemporal scales affect the success and effectiveness
of potential thin-layer placement EWN solutions. This project will develop and share
with stakeholders a multiscale monitoring and model framework, an approach which is
in high demand.

Objective

To develop a multiscale monitoring and modeling framework to:

  1. Quantify the ecological-physical coupling of coastal wetland-oyster reef mosaics
    considering interactions among flow, vegetation, reefs and sediment through field
    studies and experiments;
  2. Develop and validate a multiscale numerical model framework;
  3. Provide theoretical support and assessment tools for the TLP practice.

Approach

  1. Field observations on hydrodynamics and sediment transport processes.
  2. Small-scale CFD models for flow-vegetation interactions and sediment transport.
  3. Derive and implement improved parameterization of sub-grid processes in largescale eco-geomorphic models.
  4. Investigate the effectiveness of potential thin-layer placement solutions.

Products

Collaborators

UF-coastal-solutions

Point of Contact

Assistant Professor, Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida

Research Physical Scientist, ERDC-CHL

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Research News

Scotch Bonnet, NJ – Researchers from the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center’s Coastal and...
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Engagements

2
February
2023
(Top left): Team discussions being held in the GTM NERR auditorium. (Bottom left): Workshop attendees tour potential...

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