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Caminada Headland restoration area 2016–2019 shorelines, Louisiana Barrier Island Comprehensive Monitoring Program

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2016-10-11
End Date
2019-08-30

Citation

Jones, W.R., Thurman, H.R., Enwright, N.M., Dugas, J.L., Lee, D.M., and Cheney, W.C., 2022, Caminada Headland restoration area 2016–2019 shorelines, Louisiana Barrier Island Comprehensive Monitoring Program: U.S. Geological Survey data release, http://doi.org/10.5066/P9A4REKP.

Summary

This data package includes a high-water shoreline position map and a structures map for each year from 2016–2019 for the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) Caminada Headland Beach and Dune Restoration Incr2 project area (BA-0143). The project restored 489 acres of beach and dune habitat along more than seven miles of Caminada Headland in Jefferson and Lafourche Parishes through the direct placement of about 5.4 million cubic yards of sandy substrate from Ship Shoal. For more information on this restoration project, see the project page on Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority’s (CPRA) Coastal Information Management System (http://cims.coastal.la.gov/outreach/projects/ProjectView?projID=BA-0143). Together [...]

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Attached Files

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Caminada_Headland_Shorelines.zip 4.65 MB application/zip

Purpose

Barrier islands provide ecological services that are integral to economic and environmental interests, including storm protection and erosion control for the mainland, habitat for fish and wildlife, salinity regulation in estuaries, carbon sequestration in marshes, recreation, and tourism (Barbier and others, 2011). Therefore, it is imperative that they are managed in a way that ensures resiliency and the continued provision of ecosystem goods and services over time. Barrier islands are very dynamic environments due to their position at the land-sea interface, and are shaped by storms, wave energy, tides, currents, and relative sea-level rise. These forces result in ongoing shoreline erosion, a challenge faced by coastal Louisiana, including Caminada Headland. From the 1880s to 2015, shorelines within the Caminada Headland BICM reach receded at an average rate of 39.7 feet per year (Byrnes and others, 2018). The dynamic nature of barrier islands makes evaluating the impacts from restoration and extreme events an important part of monitoring and adaptive management of these resources. The shoreline products developed through this effort can be used to track shoreline position before and after restoration activity, and used in conjunction with other historical shoreline position maps of Caminada Headland, can also provide a powerful tool for tracking changes to barrier island shorelines over time. Please consult the accompanying readME.txt file for information on the contents of this dataset.

Additional Information

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9A4REKP

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