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Are exotic saltmarsh species better than native species for coastal protection?
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  • Bing Liu,
  • Charlotte Thompson,
  • Zeng Zhou,
  • Luzhen Chen,
  • Tinglu Cai,
  • Xiaoming Xia,
  • Yining Chen
Bing Liu
Hohai University
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Charlotte Thompson
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
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Zeng Zhou
The National Key Laboratory of Water Disaster Prevention, Hohai University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, 210098, China
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Luzhen Chen
Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education for Coastal and Wetland Ecosystem, College of the Environment and Ecology, Xiamen University
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Tinglu Cai
Second Institute of Oceanography, SOA
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Xiaoming Xia
Island Research Center, Second Institute Oceanography, State Oceanic Administration
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Yining Chen
Second Institute of Oceanography Ministry of Natural Resources

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Spartina alterniflora (hereafter S. alterniflora) is an exotic saltmarsh species introduced into Chinese tidal flats for coastal protection purpose. Against a background of national-scale removal of this exotic species, it is essential to investigate whether native Chinese saltmarsh species could provide a similar coastal protection function. Here, the hydrodynamic turbulence attenuation by the native species Scirpus mariqueter (hereafter S. mariqueter) and S. alterniflora was compared through in situ observation in a macro-tidal estuary, China. Our results revealed that the turbulence attenuation rates of the two species depended on inundation depth and wave-current interactions. Empirical formulas were developed to predict turbulence variations within canopies under wave-dominant and coupled wave-current conditions. This study suggests that short, flexible native saltmarsh species have the potential to perform coastal protection function similar to S. alterniflora in coastal regions dominated by wave-current coupling, highlighting the complexity of using native species to enhance coastal resilience.