Observations of hydrodynamic processes on atolls in the South China Sea
with deep reef flats (> 10m) with implications for sediment
transport potential
Abstract
The Nansha Islands comprise the largest atoll archipelago in the South
China Sea, accommodating 15% of global atolls. In contrast to reef
flats found elsewhere in the Indo-Pacific region that typically have
grown close to modern sea level, a considerable portion of atoll rims
there are composed of 10-20-m-deep reef flats. To better understand
modern processes, particularly whether these deep reefs are host to
modern physical reworking or instead may be relict features abandoned by
sea-level rise, we conducted a mooring hydrodynamic observation from
January to September on a 12-m-deep southwest-facing reef flat. These
measurements show a predominance of seasonally-varying waves and stable,
moderate tide-driven currents, similar to short-term observations at
three adjacent deep-reef-flats. While the reef flat was protected from
the northeast monsoon from January to May, the southwest monsoon from
June to September caused prolonged exposure to large waves (mean Hs of
1.3 m; orbital velocity 0.22 m/s) and consistent cross-flat currents
(0.08 m/s on average), resulting in near-bed skin-friction shear
velocities of 0.02 m/s on average. These wave conditions are capable of
forming and mobilizing bed ripples while entraining coarse coral sand
(d50 = 1 mm) for over half a year. Estimates of potential sediment flux
suggest the capability for combined waves and advective currents to
deflate the 12-m-deep reef rim by up to 28 mm in 8 months. As these
potential losses are similar to reef accretion rates, our measurements
imply that modern processes could play a significant role in the
maintenance of deep reef flats.