Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals

Abstract Corals at Ishigaki Island, Japan, are characterized by their high species diversity. Not only are they struck by storm waves generated annually by typhoons, the corals, especially the massive ones, in the fringing reef were buffeted by huge tsunami waves with a run-up height of ca. 30 m in...

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Main Authors: Kazuhisa Goto, Chuki Hongo, Masashi Watanabe, Keitaro Miyazawa, Akifumi Hisamatsu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-02-01
Series:Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40645-019-0265-2
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spelling doaj-df39992bf3e74532b2266a46186dc7302020-11-25T02:56:53ZengSpringerOpenProgress in Earth and Planetary Science2197-42842019-02-016111410.1186/s40645-019-0265-2Large tsunamis reset growth of massive coralsKazuhisa Goto0Chuki Hongo1Masashi Watanabe2Keitaro Miyazawa3Akifumi Hisamatsu4International Research Institute of Disaster Science, Tohoku UniversityDepartment of Chemistry, Biology, and Marine Science, University of the RyukyusSchool of Engineering, Tohoku UniversitySchool of Engineering, Tohoku UniversitySchool of Engineering, Tohoku UniversityAbstract Corals at Ishigaki Island, Japan, are characterized by their high species diversity. Not only are they struck by storm waves generated annually by typhoons, the corals, especially the massive ones, in the fringing reef were buffeted by huge tsunami waves with a run-up height of ca. 30 m in 1771 Meiwa tsunami and its predecessors at few hundred-year intervals. We present field survey and numerical results demonstrating that such near-field large tsunamis could have reset the growth of massive corals, a phenomenon which large typhoons have not caused. Our field survey revealed that the massive corals in the lagoon are not attached to the bedrock but are instead located on the sandy sea bottom. Therefore, those are movable of sufficiently large wave inundated in the lagoon. Our numerical results further showed that the maximum velocity of the tsunami at the reef edge, calculable as < 21.2 m/s at the study area, is still high in the shallow lagoon, perhaps generating sufficiently strong hydrodynamic force to devastate the massive corals in the shallow lagoon entirely, as well as some presumed damages on tabular and branching corals on the reef crest and reef slope. This numerical result is consistent with the observed fact that even a 9-m long Porites boulder (about 220 t) was cast ashore by the 1771 tsunami. The sizes of the presently living massive corals of Porites spp. are consistent with our hypothesis that they started to grow after the latest 1771 tsunami event. At the coral reefs of high tsunami-risk countries, severe destruction of corals by large tsunami waves should be considered for their growth history because, depending on the bathymetry, coral characteristics, and tsunami hydrodynamic features, tsunamis can radically alter coral habitats.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40645-019-0265-2BoulderCoralDisasterHazardIshigaki IslandTsunami
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazuhisa Goto
Chuki Hongo
Masashi Watanabe
Keitaro Miyazawa
Akifumi Hisamatsu
spellingShingle Kazuhisa Goto
Chuki Hongo
Masashi Watanabe
Keitaro Miyazawa
Akifumi Hisamatsu
Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
Boulder
Coral
Disaster
Hazard
Ishigaki Island
Tsunami
author_facet Kazuhisa Goto
Chuki Hongo
Masashi Watanabe
Keitaro Miyazawa
Akifumi Hisamatsu
author_sort Kazuhisa Goto
title Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
title_short Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
title_full Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
title_fullStr Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
title_full_unstemmed Large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
title_sort large tsunamis reset growth of massive corals
publisher SpringerOpen
series Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
issn 2197-4284
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Corals at Ishigaki Island, Japan, are characterized by their high species diversity. Not only are they struck by storm waves generated annually by typhoons, the corals, especially the massive ones, in the fringing reef were buffeted by huge tsunami waves with a run-up height of ca. 30 m in 1771 Meiwa tsunami and its predecessors at few hundred-year intervals. We present field survey and numerical results demonstrating that such near-field large tsunamis could have reset the growth of massive corals, a phenomenon which large typhoons have not caused. Our field survey revealed that the massive corals in the lagoon are not attached to the bedrock but are instead located on the sandy sea bottom. Therefore, those are movable of sufficiently large wave inundated in the lagoon. Our numerical results further showed that the maximum velocity of the tsunami at the reef edge, calculable as < 21.2 m/s at the study area, is still high in the shallow lagoon, perhaps generating sufficiently strong hydrodynamic force to devastate the massive corals in the shallow lagoon entirely, as well as some presumed damages on tabular and branching corals on the reef crest and reef slope. This numerical result is consistent with the observed fact that even a 9-m long Porites boulder (about 220 t) was cast ashore by the 1771 tsunami. The sizes of the presently living massive corals of Porites spp. are consistent with our hypothesis that they started to grow after the latest 1771 tsunami event. At the coral reefs of high tsunami-risk countries, severe destruction of corals by large tsunami waves should be considered for their growth history because, depending on the bathymetry, coral characteristics, and tsunami hydrodynamic features, tsunamis can radically alter coral habitats.
topic Boulder
Coral
Disaster
Hazard
Ishigaki Island
Tsunami
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40645-019-0265-2
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