I comment on Olea and Coleman\u27s (2014) conclusion that subsidence was the primary cause of the dramatic rise in Louisiana\u27s coastal land losses in the last 100 years. The focus on subsidence combined with the omission of context for factors not related to subsidence (e.g., dredged canals), leaves the reader with the incorrect conclusion that anthropogenic factors observed to date are insignificant, and that coastal wetland losses are only driven by subsidence. I address this omission by discussing two points about anthropogenic influences: (1) dredged canals and (2) changes in sediment load from the watershed and its distribution. They omit quantitative inclusion of two signature symptoms of the cause-and-effect relationships at tempo...
Coastal land loss is an inevitable consequence of the confluence of three primary factors: populatio...
Louisiana is facing severe coastal land loss through erosion and inundation, threatening ecosystems ...
Coastal wetland restoration can be complex and expensive, so knowing long-term consequences makes it...
Habitat change in coastal Louisiana from 1955/6 to 1978 was analyzed to determine the influence of g...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Re...
I examined four hypotheses about causes for the dramatically high coastal wetland losses (0.86% yr−1...
This paper examines causes and consequences of wetland losses in coastal Louisiana. Land loss is a c...
We thank Törnqvist et al. for engaging with our modelling study on the future response of global coa...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Within the last century the Louisiana coastline began an accelerated rate of retreat primarily due t...
Annual coastal land loss in the sedimentary deltaic plain of southern Louisiana is 102 km2, which is...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
The goals of this research were: to develop a methodology for the study of landscape process and pat...
Loss of Louisiana's coastal wetlands has reached catastrophic proportions. The loss rate is approxim...
Coastal land loss is an inevitable consequence of the confluence of three primary factors: populatio...
Louisiana is facing severe coastal land loss through erosion and inundation, threatening ecosystems ...
Coastal wetland restoration can be complex and expensive, so knowing long-term consequences makes it...
Habitat change in coastal Louisiana from 1955/6 to 1978 was analyzed to determine the influence of g...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Re...
I examined four hypotheses about causes for the dramatically high coastal wetland losses (0.86% yr−1...
This paper examines causes and consequences of wetland losses in coastal Louisiana. Land loss is a c...
We thank Törnqvist et al. for engaging with our modelling study on the future response of global coa...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Levee construction aboveground and hydrocarbon removal from belowground in coastal wetlands can crea...
Within the last century the Louisiana coastline began an accelerated rate of retreat primarily due t...
Annual coastal land loss in the sedimentary deltaic plain of southern Louisiana is 102 km2, which is...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
The goals of this research were: to develop a methodology for the study of landscape process and pat...
Loss of Louisiana's coastal wetlands has reached catastrophic proportions. The loss rate is approxim...
Coastal land loss is an inevitable consequence of the confluence of three primary factors: populatio...
Louisiana is facing severe coastal land loss through erosion and inundation, threatening ecosystems ...
Coastal wetland restoration can be complex and expensive, so knowing long-term consequences makes it...