TY - JOUR
T1 - Beach groundwater response to ocean processes and rain on a mild-sloping barrier island
T2 - Implications for sea turtle nest flooding
AU - Christiaanse, Jakob C.
AU - Antolínez, José A.A.
AU - Marshall, Christopher D.
AU - Figlus, Jens
AU - Dellapenna, Timothy M.
AU - Reniers, Ad J.H.M.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Beach groundwater dynamics play a critical role in coastal ecosystem functions, particularly in low-lying beach habitats used for nesting by endangered species like sea turtles. Incubating nests are susceptible to prolonged inundation below the groundwater table (GWT), as flooding duration critically affects egg viability. Understanding how oceanic processes and rain drive GWT fluctuations in the nesting area is essential for evaluating nest relocation strategies and designing nature-based solutions that mitigate nest flooding. Here, we analyze how infragravity waves, tides, storm surge, and rainfall drive short-term fluctuations (hourly to weekly) in the beach GWT on Galveston Island, Texas—a dissipative, mild-sloping barrier island system along the northwestern Gulf of Mexico coast. Applying tailored spectral analyses to field observations collected in 2023, we show that surge and rainfall dominate short-term GWT response in the nesting area, while higher-frequency wave and tidal signals are increasingly damped landward. To facilitate this analysis, we classify observed water levels into groundwater, mixed, and submerged regimes based on estimated wave runup. A flooding threshold analysis reveals multiple, prolonged nest inundation events (exceeding 12 h) across the backshore, even for the shallowest nests. This strongly suggests that Galveston Island’s beaches are currently unsuitable for turtle nesting, underscoring the need to continue the ongoing nest relocation program and further research nature-based solutions that enable sea turtle nesting (e.g., turtle-friendly nourishments).
AB - Beach groundwater dynamics play a critical role in coastal ecosystem functions, particularly in low-lying beach habitats used for nesting by endangered species like sea turtles. Incubating nests are susceptible to prolonged inundation below the groundwater table (GWT), as flooding duration critically affects egg viability. Understanding how oceanic processes and rain drive GWT fluctuations in the nesting area is essential for evaluating nest relocation strategies and designing nature-based solutions that mitigate nest flooding. Here, we analyze how infragravity waves, tides, storm surge, and rainfall drive short-term fluctuations (hourly to weekly) in the beach GWT on Galveston Island, Texas—a dissipative, mild-sloping barrier island system along the northwestern Gulf of Mexico coast. Applying tailored spectral analyses to field observations collected in 2023, we show that surge and rainfall dominate short-term GWT response in the nesting area, while higher-frequency wave and tidal signals are increasingly damped landward. To facilitate this analysis, we classify observed water levels into groundwater, mixed, and submerged regimes based on estimated wave runup. A flooding threshold analysis reveals multiple, prolonged nest inundation events (exceeding 12 h) across the backshore, even for the shallowest nests. This strongly suggests that Galveston Island’s beaches are currently unsuitable for turtle nesting, underscoring the need to continue the ongoing nest relocation program and further research nature-based solutions that enable sea turtle nesting (e.g., turtle-friendly nourishments).
KW - Beach groundwater
KW - Field observations
KW - Nature-based solutions
KW - Nest flooding
KW - Sandy beaches
KW - Sea turtles
KW - Spectral analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008519433&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2025.104795
DO - 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2025.104795
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105008519433
SN - 0378-3839
VL - 201
JO - Coastal Engineering
JF - Coastal Engineering
M1 - 104795
ER -