Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions

Using the Mississippi River as a tool for restoration has been a key element of restoration planning in Louisiana for decades. The results of allowing river water and sediment back into the coastal system are manifested in a number of places in present day Louisiana, with additional plans for large...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eric D. White, Ehab Meselhe, Denise Reed, Alisha Renfro, Natalie Peyronnin Snider, Yushi Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/10/2028
id doaj-59914d84a8ba44728819a1d9edb2926d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-59914d84a8ba44728819a1d9edb2926d2020-11-24T21:50:05ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412019-09-011110202810.3390/w11102028w11102028Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River DiversionsEric D. White0Ehab Meselhe1Denise Reed2Alisha Renfro3Natalie Peyronnin Snider4Yushi Wang5Planning & Research Division, Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, 150 Terrace Avenue, Baton Rouge, LA 70802, USADepartment of River-Coastal Science and Engineering, Tulane University, 627 Lindy Boggs Center, 6823 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, LA 70118, USAPontchartrain Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of New Orleans, 2000 Lakeshore Drive, New Orleans, LA 70148, USANational Wildlife Federation, 3801 Canal Street, Suite 32, New Orleans, LA 70119, USAEnvironmental Defense Fund, 1875 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20009, USAThe Water Institute of the Gulf, 1110 River Road S., Suite 200, Baton Rouge, LA 70802, USAUsing the Mississippi River as a tool for restoration has been a key element of restoration planning in Louisiana for decades. The results of allowing river water and sediment back into the coastal system are manifested in a number of places in present day Louisiana, with additional plans for large scale sediment and water diversions from the Mississippi River. Many previous numerical modeling studies have focused on sediment delivery to Louisiana estuaries. This study examines the effects of river diversions on salinity gradients in receiving estuarine basins. The Integrated Compartment Model, a planning-level model that simulates multi-decadal change in estuarine hydrodynamics and wetland systems under assumed sea-level rise scenarios, was used to assess the estuarine salinity gradient under potential management regimes. The simulations for current conditions are compared to a future 50-year simulation with additional diversions, as well as cases with a variety of diversion options. This modeling analysis shows that without additional action, 50-years of sea-level rise could result in substantial increases in salinity throughout the Mississippi Delta Plain estuaries. This can be largely offset with additional large river diversions which can maintain variable salinity gradients throughout the estuary basins.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/10/2028mississippi river deltalouisianasalinitysedimentwetland lossestuarydiversionsea-level riseenvironmental planningcoastal restoration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric D. White
Ehab Meselhe
Denise Reed
Alisha Renfro
Natalie Peyronnin Snider
Yushi Wang
spellingShingle Eric D. White
Ehab Meselhe
Denise Reed
Alisha Renfro
Natalie Peyronnin Snider
Yushi Wang
Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
Water
mississippi river delta
louisiana
salinity
sediment
wetland loss
estuary
diversion
sea-level rise
environmental planning
coastal restoration
author_facet Eric D. White
Ehab Meselhe
Denise Reed
Alisha Renfro
Natalie Peyronnin Snider
Yushi Wang
author_sort Eric D. White
title Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
title_short Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
title_full Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
title_fullStr Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
title_full_unstemmed Mitigating the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Estuaries of the Mississippi Delta Plain Using River Diversions
title_sort mitigating the effects of sea-level rise on estuaries of the mississippi delta plain using river diversions
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Using the Mississippi River as a tool for restoration has been a key element of restoration planning in Louisiana for decades. The results of allowing river water and sediment back into the coastal system are manifested in a number of places in present day Louisiana, with additional plans for large scale sediment and water diversions from the Mississippi River. Many previous numerical modeling studies have focused on sediment delivery to Louisiana estuaries. This study examines the effects of river diversions on salinity gradients in receiving estuarine basins. The Integrated Compartment Model, a planning-level model that simulates multi-decadal change in estuarine hydrodynamics and wetland systems under assumed sea-level rise scenarios, was used to assess the estuarine salinity gradient under potential management regimes. The simulations for current conditions are compared to a future 50-year simulation with additional diversions, as well as cases with a variety of diversion options. This modeling analysis shows that without additional action, 50-years of sea-level rise could result in substantial increases in salinity throughout the Mississippi Delta Plain estuaries. This can be largely offset with additional large river diversions which can maintain variable salinity gradients throughout the estuary basins.
topic mississippi river delta
louisiana
salinity
sediment
wetland loss
estuary
diversion
sea-level rise
environmental planning
coastal restoration
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/10/2028
work_keys_str_mv AT ericdwhite mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
AT ehabmeselhe mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
AT denisereed mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
AT alisharenfro mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
AT nataliepeyronninsnider mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
AT yushiwang mitigatingtheeffectsofsealevelriseonestuariesofthemississippideltaplainusingriverdiversions
_version_ 1725885461280325632