The Impact of Sea-Level Rise and Climate Change on Pacific Ocean Atolls
Providing basic understanding and specific information on storm-wave inundation of atoll islands that house Department of Defense installations, and assessing the resulting impact of sea-level rise and storm-wave inundation on infrastructure and freshwater availability under a variety of sea-level rise and climatic scenarios.
Roi-Namur Island on Kwajalein Atoll serves as our test case
Visit the research overview web site for more information.
The Problem
Many U.S. Pacific islands are atolls fringed with coral reefs and have maximum elevations of 3–5 meters, with mean elevations of 1–2 meters. Sea level in the western Pacific Ocean has been increasing at a rate 2–3 times the global average, resulting in almost 0.3 meters of net rise since 1990. The 2012 US National Climate Assessment provided global sea level rise scenarios that ranged from 0.2 to 2.0 meters by 2100. Regional scenarios are needed. A high surf event in December 2008 overwashed numerous atolls in Micronesia, ruining freshwater supplies and destroying agriculture on approximately 60% of the inhabited islands. Sea-level rise will exacerbate the hazards posed by climate change (storms, waves, temperatures, precipitation, etc.) to infrastructure, freshwater supplies, agriculture, and habitats for threatened and endangered species on U.S. and U.S.-affiliated atoll islands.
Project Objectives
- Provide basic understanding and specific information on storm-wave-induced overwash and inundation of atoll islands that house Department of Defense (DoD) installations.
- Assess the resulting impact of sea-level rise and storm-wave inundation on infrastructure and freshwater availability under a variety of sea-level rise and climatic scenarios.
- Use Roi-Namur Island (Reagan Test Site–U.S. Army Kwajalein Atoll) on Kwajalein Atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands (U.S. Associated Pacific Islands) as a test case based on historical information, sea-level rise predictions, and global climate model (GCM) output.
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Coastal Climate Impacts
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Tropical cyclone projections: Changing climate threats for Pacific Island defense installations
Spatial variability of sediment transport processes over intratidal and subtidal timescales within a fringing coral reef system
Mechanisms of wave‐driven water level variability on reef‐fringed coastlines
Most atolls will be uninhabitable by the mid-21st century because of sea-level rise exacerbating wave-driven flooding
Challenges of forecasting flooding on coral reef–lined coasts
A Bayesian-based system to assess wave-driven flooding hazards on coral reef-lined coasts
Projected atoll shoreline and run-up changes in response to sea-level rise and varying large wave conditions at Wake and Midway Atolls, Northwestern Hawaiian Islands
Atoll groundwater movement and its response to climatic and sea-level fluctuations
Wave dynamics and flooding on low-lying tropical reef-lined coasts
Doubling of coastal flooding frequency within decades due to sea-level rise
Land-use change and managed aquifer recharge effects on the hydrogeochemistry of two contrasting atoll island aquifers, Roi-Namur Island, Republic of the Marshall Islands
Identification and classification of very low frequency waves on a coral reef flat
Below are news stories associated with this project.
Providing basic understanding and specific information on storm-wave inundation of atoll islands that house Department of Defense installations, and assessing the resulting impact of sea-level rise and storm-wave inundation on infrastructure and freshwater availability under a variety of sea-level rise and climatic scenarios.
Roi-Namur Island on Kwajalein Atoll serves as our test case
Visit the research overview web site for more information.
The Problem
Many U.S. Pacific islands are atolls fringed with coral reefs and have maximum elevations of 3–5 meters, with mean elevations of 1–2 meters. Sea level in the western Pacific Ocean has been increasing at a rate 2–3 times the global average, resulting in almost 0.3 meters of net rise since 1990. The 2012 US National Climate Assessment provided global sea level rise scenarios that ranged from 0.2 to 2.0 meters by 2100. Regional scenarios are needed. A high surf event in December 2008 overwashed numerous atolls in Micronesia, ruining freshwater supplies and destroying agriculture on approximately 60% of the inhabited islands. Sea-level rise will exacerbate the hazards posed by climate change (storms, waves, temperatures, precipitation, etc.) to infrastructure, freshwater supplies, agriculture, and habitats for threatened and endangered species on U.S. and U.S.-affiliated atoll islands.
Project Objectives
- Provide basic understanding and specific information on storm-wave-induced overwash and inundation of atoll islands that house Department of Defense (DoD) installations.
- Assess the resulting impact of sea-level rise and storm-wave inundation on infrastructure and freshwater availability under a variety of sea-level rise and climatic scenarios.
- Use Roi-Namur Island (Reagan Test Site–U.S. Army Kwajalein Atoll) on Kwajalein Atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands (U.S. Associated Pacific Islands) as a test case based on historical information, sea-level rise predictions, and global climate model (GCM) output.
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Coastal Climate Impacts
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Tropical cyclone projections: Changing climate threats for Pacific Island defense installations
Spatial variability of sediment transport processes over intratidal and subtidal timescales within a fringing coral reef system
Mechanisms of wave‐driven water level variability on reef‐fringed coastlines
Most atolls will be uninhabitable by the mid-21st century because of sea-level rise exacerbating wave-driven flooding
Challenges of forecasting flooding on coral reef–lined coasts
A Bayesian-based system to assess wave-driven flooding hazards on coral reef-lined coasts
Projected atoll shoreline and run-up changes in response to sea-level rise and varying large wave conditions at Wake and Midway Atolls, Northwestern Hawaiian Islands
Atoll groundwater movement and its response to climatic and sea-level fluctuations
Wave dynamics and flooding on low-lying tropical reef-lined coasts
Doubling of coastal flooding frequency within decades due to sea-level rise
Land-use change and managed aquifer recharge effects on the hydrogeochemistry of two contrasting atoll island aquifers, Roi-Namur Island, Republic of the Marshall Islands
Identification and classification of very low frequency waves on a coral reef flat
Below are news stories associated with this project.