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Projected flooding extents and depths based on 10-, 50-, 100-, and 500-year wave-energy return periods for the State of Florida and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico before and after Hurricanes Irma and Maria due to the storms' damage to the coral reefs

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2021

Citation

Cumming, K.A., Cole, A.D., Graves, S.H., Storlazzi, C.D., Reguero, B.G., Viehman, T.S., Shope, J.B., and Gaido L., C., Nickel, B.A., and Beck, M.W., 2021, Projected flooding extents and depths based on 10-, 50-, 100-, and 500-year wave-energy return periods for the State of Florida and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico before and after Hurricanes Irma and Maria due to the storms' damage to the coral reefs: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https:// doi.org/10.5066/P9EHOBKO.

Summary

This data release provides flooding extent polygons based on wave-driven total water levels for the coral lined coast of Florida and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The wave and sea-level conditions were then propagated using the XBeach over 100-m spaced shore-normal transects modified to account for base and post-storm scenarios. In situ observations following hurricanes Irma and Maria were used to create classifications of impact level to reefs where 0 = no impact, 0 - 0.05 = minor impact, 0.05 - 0.15 = moderate impact, and 0.15 - 1.00 = major impact. Categories were converted into numeric values of 0, 1, 2, and 3 that corresponded with the none, minor, moderate, and major damage category, respectively. These damage category values [...]

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Location_Map.png
“Location map of zones of Florida and Puerto Rico included in this data release.”
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Purpose

The degradation of coastal habitats, particularly coral reefs, raises risks by increasing the exposure of coastal communities to flooding hazards. Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017 caused widespread damage to the State of Florida and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico's coral reefs. Here we combine engineering, ecologic, geospatial, social, and economic tools to provide a rigorous valuation of the increased hazard faced by Florida and Puerto Rico's reef-fronted coastal communities caused by the hurricane-induced damage to their adjacent coral reefs. We follow risk-based valuation approaches to map flood zones at 10-m2 resolution along all 980 km of Florida and Puerto Rico's reef-lined shorelines for both the undamaged, pre-2017 hurricanes coral reef conditions and those measured after the hurricanes. The methods follow a sequence of steps integrating physics-based hydrodynamic modeling, quantitative geospatial modeling, and economic and social analyses to quantify the hazard, the role of coral reefs in reducing the hazard, and the resulting consequences (described in Storlazzi and others, 2019).These data are intended for policy makers, resource managers, science researchers, students, and the general public. These data can be used with geographic information systems or other software to identify and assess possible areas of vulnerability to wave-driven flooding. These data are not intended to be used for navigation.

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9EHOBKO

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