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ADAPTATION TO A CHANGING CLIMATE IN THE COASTAL ZONE – A CASE STUDY OF PRIME HOOK NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE
2018
Coastal Engineering Proceedings
Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge and its adjacent water bodies are important natural features along western Delaware Bay, USA. Historically salt and brackish marsh habitats, portions of the Refuge were diked and managed as freshwater impoundments starting in the early 1980s. Over the past decade, some of these impoundments have reverted to saline conditions, largely due to several storm events (including Hurricane Sandy in 2012) that have caused flooding, erosion, and opened several breaches
doi:10.9753/icce.v36.risk.2
fatcat:esr3kyq2ujctrcxwvkvuoqm62i