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December 18, 2000
Contact: Tim Stephens (831) 459-2495; stephens@cats.ucsc.edu
HISTORIC RECORDS REVEAL LINKS BETWEEN EL NINO, COASTAL EROSION, AND SHIFTING SANDS
OF BEACHES IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
For Immediate Release
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--Erosion of seacliffs, damage to coastal structures, and the
comings and goings of beach sand along California's central coast are all closely
linked to the intense winter storms associated with El Niño. Two new studies
by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, reveal the connections
between this climatic heavy hitter and the processes that shape the coastline of
California.
UCSC postdoctoral researcher Curt Storlazzi and professor of Earth sciences Gary
Griggs found that damaging coastal storms are three times more likely to occur during
an El Niño winter than in other years. As global warming causes sea levels
to rise, storm damage on the coast will only get worse, Griggs said.
"By concentrating our population on the coasts, we have put the bulk of our
civilization within a few feet of sea level," he said. "When you combine
rising sea levels with El Niño on the West Coast and hurricanes on the East
Coast, the result will be larger and more frequent losses due to storm damage."
In a related study, Griggs and graduate student Cope Willis found that although winter
storms during El Niño can erode beaches down to bare rock, the same storms
ultimately replenish the beaches by washing tons of fresh sediment from rivers and
streams into coastal waters. Their preliminary results show no long-term changes
in the amount of sand on central California beaches.
The studies, which involved analyses of historic records as far back as 1910, were
presented December 16 and 17 at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union
in San Francisco.
El Niño is a disruption of oceanic and atmospheric circulation patterns spawned
at irregular intervals in tropical waters. It involves weakening of the trade winds
and unusually warm surface waters in the eastern Pacific, leading to changes in weather
in regions far from the tropics. Storlazzi used weather and oceanographic records
to identify El Niño events dating back to 1910. He then ranked their intensity
to create an index showing six higher intensity and 17 lower intensity El Niños
in the past 90 years.
El Niño winters batter the coast harder than usual for several reasons. In
a normal year, there might be one really big storm, but beaches absorb most of its
force, Storlazzi said. During an El Niño year, a succession of big storms
removes the protective beaches. Waves attack structures built on the beach and start
hitting the seacliffs. Storms and waves also approach the coast from a more southerly
direction, hitting areas normally protected from wave action. In addition, El Niño
storms bring high rainfall (which saturates and weakens coastal bluffs), elevated
sea levels (causing waves to break closer to shore), and bigger waves.
But not all El Niños are created equal. Storlazzi looked at equatorial conditions
such as sea-surface temperature, barometric pressure, winds, and storm records to
rate the intensity of El Niños, and compared those findings with conditions
in California.
"With increasing El Niño intensity, there is an exponential increase
in the factors that enhance coastal erosion in California, such as rainfall, wave
height, and sea level," Storlazzi said. "We found that 75 percent of the
shoreline erosion and damage has occurred during El Niño winters, and the
moderate- to high-intensity El Niños do most of the damage."
The most recent ones, in 1982-83 and 1997-98, were among the most intense El Niños
of the past 90 years, Storlazzi noted. Unfortunately for coastal dwellers, a 30-year
gap between major El Niños, from 1941 to 1972, coincided with a period of
intense coastal development. The result, said Storlazzi, is that a lot of people
built houses in vulnerable places, such as right on the beach or on seacliffs that
are now crumbling.
Beach erosion caused by the El Niño winters of 1982-83 and 1997-98 spurred
calls for state-funded beach-nourishment projects. Few studies, however, have documented
long-term trends in beach size or identified sites that could benefit from such projects,
according to Griggs.
"There has been a big push to restore beaches in California, but before we spend
millions of dollars on beach nourishment projects it's critical that we know which
beaches, if any, are undergoing long-term erosion and why," Griggs said. "We
also need to ask where is all the sand going to come from, how long is it going to
stay on the beach, and what are the long-term costs."
Willis is studying seven beaches between San Francisco and Monterey using aerial
photographs and other historic records to document changes. At the meeting, he will
present results from three state beaches in Santa Cruz County indicating no net loss
of beach size in this area.
"El Niño winters cause a lot of beach erosion, but the beaches recover
pretty rapidly," Willis said. "The heavy rains flush out a lot of sediment,
which is crucial for maintaining beach size."
In southern California, the situation is different because of the number of dams
on coastal rivers that block the transport of sediment to the coast, he said. Eroding
seacliffs are also an important source of sand that gets cut off when people build
seawalls. Beach nourishment is a long-term commitment because sand doesn't stay in
one place but moves constantly along the coast, Griggs said. "We have to ask
ourselves if beach nourishment is going to be a cost-effective long-term solution.
My concern is that we're just dumping sand down a hole," he said.
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Editor's note: Reporters may contact Griggs at (831) 459-5006 or griggs@cats.ucsc.edu
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