Loading…

What is a coastal hazard? Perceptions of critical coastal hazards amongst decision makers in communities across the Great Lakes

Coastal hazards are pervasive across the Great Lakes coastline due to highly variable water levels, community utilization of the landscape, and landscape composition. These coastlines are dotted with communities that depend on the lake for socioeconomic stability. Recently, many communities have bee...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ocean & coastal management 2024-05, Vol.251, p.107065, Article 107065
Main Authors: Bunting, Erin L., Theuerkauf, Ethan J.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Coastal hazards are pervasive across the Great Lakes coastline due to highly variable water levels, community utilization of the landscape, and landscape composition. These coastlines are dotted with communities that depend on the lake for socioeconomic stability. Recently, many communities have been tasked with the development of new coastal management policies to combat the record water levels and its impacts to socioenvironmental conditions. Many of those tasked with the development of such policies don't, necessarily, have backgrounds in coastal processes. This lack of background knowledge may impact coastal management strategies. Through a workshop activity, in 6 communities, local decision makers were asked to interpret imagery depicting varying coastal hazards. Additionally, participants were asked to rank the hazard based on the impacts seen in the community. Using text mining and statistical analysis, patterns in their interpretation were chronicled. Overall, we found vastly different terminology, understanding, and hazard recognition across the communities. [Display omitted] •It is essential to foster a broad collaborative relationship between decision makers and the scientific community.•Across all communities there was great awareness of erosion effects and mitigation strategies.•Beyond erosion there was lesser understanding of coastal hazards and the mitigation strategies associated.
ISSN:0964-5691
1873-524X
DOI:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2024.107065