TY - JOUR
T1 - A trade-off approach to optimize nature-based flood defense designs
T2 - riparian willow forests as case study
AU - van Starrenburg, Corinne
AU - Mancheño, Alejandra Gijón
AU - van de Koppel, Johan
AU - van der Wal, Daphne
AU - Slegt, Matthijs H.
AU - Schrama, Maarten J.J.
AU - Berg, Matty P.
AU - van Wesenbeeck, Bregje K.
AU - Kalloe, Su A.
AU - Hofland, Bas
AU - Bouma, Tjeerd J.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Nature-based solutions are increasingly recognized as effective and multifunctional components of climate-resilient flood protection. While tropical mangroves have received substantial attention, temperate riparian forests, particularly willow systems, offer comparable wave attenuation and biodiversity benefits, yet remain understudied. This study assesses the ecological and protective value of three types of willow floodplain forests: a so-called wild-grown willow forest, a pollard willow forest, and a willow plantation. Using field data from the Biesbosch National Park (the Netherlands), we quantified forest structure, ground-dwelling invertebrate diversity, and modelled wave attenuation under storm scenarios. Structural complexity and biodiversity were highest in the wild-grown forest, with significantly greater invertebrate order richness, larger body sizes, and more heterogeneous canopy architecture. The pollard forest showed the highest wave attenuation efficiency due to their dense, low-lying crown structures. The plantation forest showed lower values across both axes. We integrated these findings into a trade-off model evaluating ecological value, flood protection efficiency, and a 50-year simple cost analysis of each forest type as a hybrid solution alongside traditional dikes. While the pollard forest is the most spatially efficient for flood attenuation, the wild-grown system provides greater ecological value at lower lifecycle cost. Our results underscore the importance of tailoring hybrid flood defense strategies to local priorities - balancing biodiversity, spatial constraints, and economic feasibility. The framework developed here can inform ecosystem-based design in delta regions worldwide, supporting integrated climate adaptation that aligns safety with ecological resilience.
AB - Nature-based solutions are increasingly recognized as effective and multifunctional components of climate-resilient flood protection. While tropical mangroves have received substantial attention, temperate riparian forests, particularly willow systems, offer comparable wave attenuation and biodiversity benefits, yet remain understudied. This study assesses the ecological and protective value of three types of willow floodplain forests: a so-called wild-grown willow forest, a pollard willow forest, and a willow plantation. Using field data from the Biesbosch National Park (the Netherlands), we quantified forest structure, ground-dwelling invertebrate diversity, and modelled wave attenuation under storm scenarios. Structural complexity and biodiversity were highest in the wild-grown forest, with significantly greater invertebrate order richness, larger body sizes, and more heterogeneous canopy architecture. The pollard forest showed the highest wave attenuation efficiency due to their dense, low-lying crown structures. The plantation forest showed lower values across both axes. We integrated these findings into a trade-off model evaluating ecological value, flood protection efficiency, and a 50-year simple cost analysis of each forest type as a hybrid solution alongside traditional dikes. While the pollard forest is the most spatially efficient for flood attenuation, the wild-grown system provides greater ecological value at lower lifecycle cost. Our results underscore the importance of tailoring hybrid flood defense strategies to local priorities - balancing biodiversity, spatial constraints, and economic feasibility. The framework developed here can inform ecosystem-based design in delta regions worldwide, supporting integrated climate adaptation that aligns safety with ecological resilience.
KW - Biodiversity
KW - Floodplain forest
KW - Forest structure
KW - Ground-dwelling invertebrates
KW - Hybrid solution
KW - Salix
KW - Wave attenuation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105027725367&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2025.107886
DO - 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2025.107886
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105027725367
SN - 0925-8574
VL - 225
JO - Ecological Engineering
JF - Ecological Engineering
M1 - 107886
ER -