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Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2024

Thomas S. N. Oliver*
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales at ADFA, Canberra, ACT, Australia
Michael A. Kinsela
Affiliation:
School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia
Thomas B. Doyle
Affiliation:
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, Sydney, NSW, Australia School of Earth, Atmospheric and Life Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia
Roger F. McLean
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales at ADFA, Canberra, ACT, Australia
*
Corresponding author: Thomas S. N. Oliver; Email: t.oliver@unsw.edu.au
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Abstract

The beach–foredune system at Bengello Beach has been monitored monthly to bimonthly at four profiles (P1–P4) since 1972 and documented the building of a foredune. This paper addresses the remarkable changes which occurred in 2022 as storm waves overtopped and trimmed this foredune at all profiles, then later removed this entire feature at two of the profiles (P3, P4) but not the others (P1, P2). Wave parameters for these storm events, measured by deepwater and nearshore wave buoys, enable a comparison of storm characteristics and resulting beach–foredune impact. During the storm event which destroyed the foredune, nearshore wave height exceeded deepwater wave height, in contrast with other storms that year. The beach–foredune lost 78 m3/m in 2022 and the notable 1974 storms that impacted this coastline resulted in 95 m3/m volume loss. During 2023, beach recovery has occurred, but not rebuilt the foredune. It had persisted for ~40 years enduring many other severe storm events, and the coastal protection afforded by the dune system has been compromised. This highlights the need to consider dune morphology in assessments of erosion hazard and inundation risk along similar coastlines.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

This paper offers a fresh perspective on a long–term beach–foredune monitoring site in southeastern Australia and presents the remarkable changes we observed in 2022. We present a robust dataset of beach–foredune monitoring accompanied by a unique combination of both deepwater and shallowwater wave observations which characterise a series of five storms that caused beach–foredune change. We note the differing impact of each of these storms and show how the most intense of these events caused wave overtopping of a foredune, while another event, around half as strong, actually removed this foredune. While subsequent recovery of sand to the beach has restored the shoreline to its previous position, the removal of the foredune means this section of coast is now more vulnerable to future wave impacts. The events of 2022 eroded 78 m3/m of sand from the beach and foredune system and approaches the 95 m3/m eroded in 1974 following the notable storms which impacted this region. In exploring the impacts on the beach and foredune and their causes, we shed light on the future of open sandy coastlines around the world and challenge readers to recalibrate their notion of expected coastal change.

Introduction

There has been growing concern around the world for the future of sandy coastlines given that climate change will accelerate sea level rise (Dangendorf et al., Reference Dangendorf, Hay, Calafat, Marcos, Piecuch, Berk and Jensen2019) and potentially increase the intensity and frequency of storm events (Reguero et al., Reference Reguero, Losada and Méndez2019; Kaur et al., Reference Kaur, Kumar, Weller and Young2021). Global analyses have suggested the potential for widespread erosion and loss of beach and dune systems (Vousdoukas et al., Reference Vousdoukas, Ranasinghe, Mentaschi, Plomaritis, Athanasiou, Luijendijk and Feyen2020) with a rebuttal pointing to the dangers of overlooking regional and local-scale factors (Cooper et al., Reference Cooper, Masselink, Coco, Short, Castelle, Rogers, Anthony, Green, Kelley, Pilkey and Jackson2020; Short, Reference Short2022). Given this discussion, there is an urgent need to better constrain the dynamics of natural beach and dune systems to provide a critical baseline of understanding upon which to build future projections. Recent progress in extracting shoreline positions from satellite data has produced unparalleled regional and global timeseries of beach change (Nanson et al., Reference Bishop-Taylor, Nanson, Sagar and Lymburner2021; Nanson et al., Reference Nanson, Bishop-Taylor, Sagar and Lymburner2022; Vos et al., Reference Vos, Harley, Turner and Splinter2023a). Yet these 1D shoreline datasets contain horizontal uncertainties in shoreline position of ~10 m in microtidal settings, and greater uncertainties in meso- to macro-tidal beach environments (Vos et al., Reference Vos, Splinter, Palomar-Vázquez, Pardo-Pascual, Almonacid-Caballer, Cabezas-Rabadán, Kras, Luijendijk, Calkoen, Almeida, Pais, AHF, Mao, Harris, Castelle, Buscombe and Vitousek2023b). They also do not capture the complexity of beach morphological and volumetric change in response to metocean conditions, nor do they consider the behaviour of dune systems which commonly back sandy beaches and which interact with the beach. Thus, despite the utility of satellite-derived shorelines for regional assessments, decadal beach and dune morphodynamics, including storm erosion and recovery, must still be deduced from long-term topographic surveys or remote sensing techniques that retain 3D features of coastal landforms (e.g. photogrammetry) (Hanslow, Reference Hanslow2007; Doyle et al., Reference Doyle, Short, Ruggiero and Woodroffe2019).

Several multi-decadal beach–dune topographic survey programmes exist around the world in a variety of coastal settings, including the non-tidal southeastern Baltic coast at Lithuania (Jarmalavičius et al., Reference Jarmalavičius, Satkūnas, Žilinskas and Pupienis2012, Reference Jarmalavičius, Žilinskas, Pupienis and Kriaučiūnienė2017, Reference Jarmalavičius, Pupienis, Žilinskas, Janušaite and Karaliunas2020) and Poland (Rózyński, Reference Rózyński2005; Ostrowski et al., Reference Ostrowski, Schönhofer and Szmytkiewicz2016), the Netherlands at Egmond aan Zee (Wijnberg and Terwindt, Reference Wijnberg and Terwindt1995; Rattan et al., Reference Rattan, Ruessink and Hsieh2005; Pape et al., Reference Pape, Plant and Ruessink2010) and Noordwijk (Wijnberg and Terwindt, Reference Wijnberg and Terwindt1995; Kroon et al., Reference Kroon, Larson, Möller, Yokoki, Rozynski, Cox and Larroude2008; Quartel et al., Reference Quartel, Kroon and Ruessink2008), the US coast at Duck, NC (Larson and Kraus, Reference Larson and Kraus1994; Zhang and Larson, Reference Zhang and Larson2021), Rhode Island (Lacey and Peck, Reference Lacey and Peck1998), Torrey Pines (Ludka et al., Reference Ludka, Guza, O’Reilly, Merrifield, Flick, Bak, Hesser, Bucciarelli, Olfe, Woodward, Boyd, Smith, Okihiro, Grenzeback, Parry and Boyd2019), the NW coast of the US (Ruggiero et al., Reference Ruggiero, Kaminsky, Gelfenbaum and Cohn2016), Canada (Ollerhead et al., Reference Ollerhead, Davidson-Arnott, Walker and Mathew2013), several beaches around the southwest of England (McCarroll et al., Reference McCarroll, Valiente, Wiggins, Scott and Masselink2023), Porsmilin Beach (Bertin et al., Reference Bertin, Floc’h, Le Dantec, Jaud, Cancouët, Franzetti, Cuq, Prunier, Ammann, Augereau, Lamarche, Belleney, Rouan, David, Deschamps, Delacourt and Suanez2022) and Vougot Beach (Suanez et al., Reference Suanez, Yates, Floc’h and Accensi2023) in northwestern France, and the Hasaki coast of eastern Japan (Banno et al., Reference Banno, Nakamura, Kosako, Nakagawa, Yanagishima and Kuriyama2020; Eichentopf et al., Reference Eichentopf, Alsina, Christou, Kuriyama and Karunarathna2020). In southeastern Australia, two of the longest beach survey programmes in the world exist in micro-tidal, wave-dominated settings, one at Narrabeen-Collaroy from 1976–present (Turner et al., Reference Turner, Harley, Short, Simmons, Bracs, Phillips and Splinter2016), and another at Bengello Beach from 1972–present (McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023). Both these sites are repositories of multidecadal beach change with the Bengello site also capturing foredune dynamics and beach–foredune interaction over the survey period.

To accompany these two survey programmes, deepwater wave conditions along the southeast Australian coastline have been monitored for decades by the Manly Hydraulics Laboratory (MHL) using a network of wave buoys, with wave height and period records extending back to the 1970s and directional observations commencing progressively across the network from the 1990s. While the ocean wave buoy network measures deepwater wave conditions along the NSW coast, wave observations in shallowwater remain sparse and less accessible. To address that, a systematic programme of nearshore wave deployments in shallow coastal waters (<35 m) was commenced by the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) in March 2016, which includes 20 observation locations to date (Kinsela et al., Reference Kinsela, Morris, Ingleton, Doyle, Sutherland, Doszpot, Miller, Holtznagel, Harley and Hanslow2024). This data is being used to calibrate wave models to investigate and predict coastal hazards along the NSW coast. The longest deployments to date have been positioned adjacent to the long-term monitoring sites at Collaroy-Narrabeen Beach and Bengello Beach. The nearshore wave data enables new insights regarding wave transformation into the nearshore and its impact on beach and foredune change at these sites.

This study presents new data and observations of beach–foredune change at Bengello Beach in 2022. The foredune, which developed during the period covered by the 50-year survey programme, was severely eroded, overtopped and then destroyed due to the impact of storm wave conditions in 2022. Utilising the beach topographic data and photographic record, accompanied by deepwater and nearshore wave observations, this paper aims to explore the drivers of beach and foredune change during recent large storms and storm sequences and place these results within the context of multi-decadal trends in beach and foredune morphology and volume.

Regional setting

Bengello Beach is a ~6-km-long sandy beach approximately 250 km south of Sydney on the NSW south coast (Figure 1). The shoreline is crescent shaped, faces ESE and is bounded in the north by the rocky Broulee Head with a tombolo connecting to Broulee Island. In the south, the beach is bounded by a training wall which directs the northern bank of the Moruya River estuary entrance. Bathymetric contours parallel the Bengello shoreline and the shoreface has a steeply concave geometry in the centre of the beach out to ~30 m water depth (Oliver et al., Reference Oliver, Tamura, Brooke, Short, Kinsela, Woodroffe and Thom2020). The beach is backed by a 2-km-wide strandplain comprising a series of ~60 foredune ridges formed over the mid- to late Holocene with radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating studies constraining the shoreface and shoreline evolution, respectively (Oliver et al., Reference Oliver, Dougherty, Gliganic and Woodroffe2015; Thom et al., Reference Thom, Bowman, Gillespte, Temple and Baraetti1981; Thom and Roy, Reference Thom and Roy1985). OSL dating of foredune ridges comprising the outer ~150 m of the strandplain reveals continued progradation during the past ~500 years at a rate consistent with the Holocene trend of 0.27 m/yr. (Tamura et al., Reference Tamura, Oliver, Cunningham and Woodroffe2019).

Figure 1. (a, b, c) Location of Bengello Beach in southeastern Australia and the location of the four profiles (P1–P4) monitored since January 1972 demarcated on Nearmap imagery from May 2022 (d) and March 2023 (e). Photos (f, g, h) showing the destruction of the foredune at Profile 3 (P3) with photo location and direction of view indicated in (d) and (e). Yellow arrows in (e) indicate the alongshore variation in foredune scarp position which developed in response to the July storms (Storms 4 and 5) and the associated megacusps which were present in the foreshore at this time (see Supplementary Figure 10).

McLean et al. (Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023) have presented a comprehensive summary on the changes to Bengello Beach over 50 years (January 1972 to January 2022). The beach–foredune system at this site has been monitored monthly to bimonthly at four profiles located near the centre of the beach (Figure 1). These surveys documented the severe erosion events of the mid to late 1970s, the recovery from which built a new foredune 30–40 m seaward of the now degraded scarp (McLean and Shen, Reference McLean and Shen2006; McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023). The beach has undergone cycles of erosion and recovery over the survey period, changing from more dissipative morphodynamic states to more reflective (Wright and Short, Reference Wright and Short1984). The beach surveys show that beach slope averages 4° (between MSL and +2 m) but fluctuates between ~2–7° depending on morphodynamic state and erosion and accretion due to storms. Since the early 1980s when the foredune developed, beach accretion and erosion cycles had occurred on the seaward side of this foredune. The foredune itself is vegetated and stabilised with pioneering species on the seaward side such as Spinifex sericirus, sea rocket Cakile maritima and Cakile edentula and coastal pigface Carpobrotus glaucescens dominating its crest and seaward side, while the landward side comprises secondary species such as coastal sword sedge Lepidosperma gladiatum, mat rush Lomandera longifolia and coastal wattle Acacia sophorae. The seaward side of the foredune has experienced numerous storm erosion events which generally create a scarp of 1–2 m. Post-storm recovery involves scarp slumping, backshore building from landward migration of sand due to aeolian transport and revegetation with the pioneering species. Aeolian sand transport most likely occurs under persistent ESE or ENE wind with velocities >28 km/h capable of transporting the average grain size found on the upper beach or berm (Doyle et al., Reference Doyle, Hesp and Woodroffe2024).

At Bengello Beach, prevailing waves are from the SSE to SE with an average significant wave height (Hsig) of 1.5 m and average peak wave periods are generally between 8 and 10 s. The intense storms, both tropical and extratropical, which produce large and powerful waves and low storm surges (by global standards), are the persistent cause of beach erosion along the eastern Australian coast. Storm waves in this region (Hsig > 3 m) are also typically from the SSE, and there were on average 15 storm events per year between 1986 and 2009 recorded by the Batemans Bay wave buoy. The average significant wave height for these storms was 3.71 m with an average maximum wave height of 7.19 m and an average duration of 57 h (Shand et al., Reference Shand, Goodwin, Mole, Carley, Coghlan, Harley and Pierson2010). Wave periods during storm events are typically between 10 and 15 s. Bengello Beach and the adjacent coastline experiences a mixed semi-diurnal micro-tidal regime with a spring and neap tidal range of 1.6 m and 0.7 m, respectively.

Metocean conditions in this region and hence beach–foredune erosion/recovery are known to be influenced by climate cycles, especially the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Southern Annular Mode (SAM) (Harley et al., Reference Harley, Turner, Short and Ranasinghe2010; Browning and Goodwin, Reference Browning and Goodwin2013; Barnard et al., Reference Barnard, Short, Harley, Splinter, Vitousek, Turner, Allan, Banno, Bryan, Doria, Hansen, Kato, Kuriyama, Randall-Goodwin, Ruggiero, Walker and Heathfield2015; Mortlock and Goodwin, Reference Mortlock and Goodwin2016). These are also known to influence one another (Gong et al., Reference Gong, Feldstein and Luo2010; Lim et al., Reference Lim, Hendon and Rashid2013). The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) indicates the strength of the ENSO climatic pattern (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Deser, Yu, DiNezio, Clement, Glynn, Manzello and Enochs2017; Trenberth, Reference Trenberth, McPhaden, Santoso and Cai2020). When eastern Australia experiences a La Niña, there is generally increased rainfall and storminess, and during El Niño, rainfall and storminess is reduced. The Southern Annular Mode (SAM) also influences rainfall and storminess.

Methods

Survey methodology and beach–foredune metrics

Four profiles at Bengello Beach, which have been monitored monthly to bimonthly since January 1972, are labelled P1 to P4, with P1 separated from the other three profiles by 286 m and P2, P3 and P3 ~70 m apart (Figure 1d, e; McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023). Beach–foredune surveys in 2022 were conducted using an RTK GPS with each successive survey referencing to a series of datums. For this study, surveys are refenced to the Swale Datum (SD) and Foredune Datum (FD) at each profile with a Back Datum (BD) positioned further inland only relevant to the longer survey programme (see McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023 for a fuller explanation of datums used at this site). Beach–foredune volumes were computed for each of the four profiles by taking the beach–foredune topography at the time of the survey and calculating area under the curve bounded by a horizontal line at 0 m Australian Height Datum (AHD) (which approximates mean sea level along this coastline) and a line extending vertically downward from the SD. Area under the curve (m2) is converted to a volume (m3) assuming a 1-m-wide profile. Beach–foredune volume over time was computed relative to January 2022. Change in the +3 m intercept relative to January 2022 was also calculated as the position of this contour broadly corresponds to the position of the beach–dune interface and is largely beyond the influence of fairweather wave processes. To place these results in the context of the longer-term survey programme presented in McLean et al. (Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023), we added a fixed volume representing the profile further landwards of the SD to the BD where past change has occurred but is no longer part of the active beach–foredune zone.

Deepwater and nearshore wave conditions

Wave buoys have been maintained immediately offshore of Batemans Bay in 65–84 m water depths continuously since May 1986, with the current position (−34.740278, 150.3175) in 65 m water depth (Figure 1b) occupied since February 2018. Non-directional wave buoys were deployed at Batemans Bay until February 2001 when directional buoy (DWR-MkIII) deployments commenced (Kulmar et al., Reference Kulmar, Modra and Fitzhenry2013). Deepwater wave data from Batemans Bay were obtained for the study period from MHL as hourly wave parameter time series including standard wave height, period and direction. A nearshore Sofar Spotter wave buoy has been maintained in 12–13 m water depth immediately adjacent to the Bengello Beach survey transects (−35.88000, 150.16108) since November 2020 (Figure 1c). The Spotter wave buoys use GNSS positioning and Doppler shift to measure their displacement on the water surface, and wave data are comparable to other standard wave buoy technologies (Kinsela et al., Reference Kinsela, Morris, Ingleton, Doyle, Sutherland, Doszpot, Miller, Holtznagel, Harley and Hanslow2024). The data collection and processing methods have been described by Kinsela et al. (Reference Kinsela, Morris, Ingleton, Doyle, Sutherland, Doszpot, Miller, Holtznagel, Harley and Hanslow2024). The nearshore wave buoy data were analysed to compare the wave conditions (e.g. height, period, direction) between storm events observed at Bengello Beach in 2022 and to compare the offshore (deepwater) and nearshore wave conditions during each storm. Total water levels (TWLs) were also calculated at each profile throughout the storm events. The M2 “model of models” formula of Atkinson et al. (Reference Atkinson, Power, Moura, Hammond, Callaghan and Baldock2017) was used to calculate the 2% exceedance run-up level (Ru2%) including wave set-up. The beach slope used for each profile and event was the mean of beach slope values calculated between mean sea level (0 m AHD) and 2 and 3 m elevation using the pre- and post-event topographic surveys at each profile. Wave buoy data measured in ~13 m water depth adjacent to the profiles throughout the events were used to calculate Ru2% at each profile. The TWLs were then obtained using the calculated Ru2% values and ocean water levels measured at the nearby Batemans Bay ocean tide gauge.

Results

Storm events at Bengello Beach in 2022

Five storm events resulting in significant beach–foredune change were observed at Bengello Beach during 2022 and are analysed here. The first of the storm events of note were consecutive moderate storms (Storms 1 and 2; Table 1) which occurred in early March with peaks on 3 March and 9 March (Table 1; Figure 2b, c; Supplementary Figures 1 and 8). The second of these two events was slightly larger, and peak wave energy was from a slightly more southerly direction (Table 1). Also, during early March over the period corresponding to Storms 1 and 2, a moderate flood event in the nearby Moruya River brought with it both driftwood and a fine brown silt that covered the backshore of the beach (262 mm of rain recorded during this period; Table 1). Peak TWL during these events were lowest at P1 (2.4 m AHD) and highest at P2 (2.9 m AHD) (Table 1).

Table 1. Storm events of 2022 recorded by the Batemans Bay wave buoy and Bengello wave buoy. The cells highlighted by underlining show that for Storm 5, the Bengello nearshore wave buoy had a higher Hsig than that of the Batemans Bay deepwater wave buoy, whereas for all other storm events in 2022 the Batemans Bay buoy Hsig exceeded that of the Bengello buoy by ~1 m. Note that Hsig here refers to the spectral significant wave height while Hmax is a time domain parameter calculated using zero upcrossing method. Tp is the period associated with the frequency at the peak of the energy spectrum, that is, the frequency of highest energy density. For average direction, Dp has been used which is the direction corresponding to the peak of wave energy (also a spectral parameter) and is the average value for the period during which Hsig consecutively exceeds 3 m. Peak wave power is the peak value of the instantaneous wave power per metre alongshore which incorporates both Hsig and Tp to capture energy/power of the wave conditions. Cumulative storm wave energy flux for Hsig > 3 m is a measure of the total wave power directed at the shoreline during the period when Hsig exceeds 3 m and has been calculated following the method of Harley et al. (Reference Harley, Turner, Kinsela, Middleton, Mumford, Splinter, Phillips, Simmons, Hanslow and Short2017). Average wind strength and direction as well as rainfall is from the nearby Moruya Heads station. Peak TWL is shown for the March, April and July storm events (see Supplementary Figures 12 and 3)

Figure 2. (a) Hourly Hsig observations >3 m recorded by the Batemans Bay wave buoy for the period January 2020 through to March 2023 accompanied by beach volume change over the same time period relative to January 1972. (b) Recorded deepwater ocean wave conditions from the Batemans Bay wave buoy for the 2022 including significant wave height (Hsig), maximum wave height (Hmax) and wave direction (degrees). (c) Recorded nearshore wave conditions from ~13 m water depth adjacent to Bengello Beach including significant wave height (Hsig), maximum wave height (Hmax) and wave direction (degrees). (d) Change in beach volume over 2022 relative to the volume of the January survey for the four central beach profiles at Bengello. (e) Change in distance from the back datum to the +3 m intercept for each of the four central beach profiles at Bengello relative to the position in January 2022.

Only weeks later, a more intense event (Storm 3) occurred between 31 March and 4 April 2022 which had the highest peak and total wave power of the five storms (Table 1; Figure 2b, c; Supplementary Figures 2 and 8). During this event the Batemans Bay buoy recorded a Hsig > 6 m for ~8 h which coincided with a spring high tide (Supplementary Figure 2). The Hmax on the Batemans Bay buoy also peaked above 10 m with a value of 12.6 m closely corresponding with this high tide. Wave direction at the onset of the storm was between 170° and 180°, but at the time of peak, wave heights were southeasterly between 130° and 140°. During this event, the Bengello nearshore wave buoy measured Hsig values of 4.5–6 m. During the high tide, Hmax exceeded 8 m. Wave direction recorded by the Bengello nearshore wave buoy was aligned with the orientation of the beach (average of 114°), and there was no notable shift in direction during the event. Peak TWL was between 3.8 and 4.4 m across all four profiles during Storm 3 (Table 1).

The third group of storms of note occurred between the 1 and 13 July 2022 (Storms 4 and 5; Table 1; Figure 2b, c; Supplementary Figure 3). During the second event (Storm 5), the peak Hsig at Bengello Beach actually exceeded the deepwater Hsig value recorded by the Batemans Bay buoy (Table 1). This contrasts with the other events in 2022 where wave heights were generally ~1 m lower at the Bengello buoy compared to the Batemans Bay buoy (Table 1). Local storm generated wind sea from a prevailing onshore wind may be responsible for this higher value (Supplementary Figure 8). During this storm, nearshore wave direction was closely aligned with the orientation of the beach (Supplementary Figure 3). Also, when wave steepness was considered, this storm stood out from the others. Peak TWL for these events (Storms 4 and 5) was lowest at P1 (3.4 m) and higher at the other three profiles (3.8–4.0 m).

Beach and foredune morphological changes in 2022

In January 2022, a degraded scarp was evident at all four profiles – a legacy of storm events in 2020. In the case of P1, the scarp in 2020 was <1.5 m landward of the scarp which developed as a result of the June 2016 storm (Figure 3), the most significant regional beach erosion event of the past decade (Harley et al., Reference Harley, Turner, Kinsela, Middleton, Mumford, Splinter, Phillips, Simmons, Hanslow and Short2017). In contrast, at the other three profiles, the degraded scarp from 2020 was 4–6 m further seaward than the June 2016 scarp (Figure 3) due to beach recovery. Beach profiles in January 2022 had a gently concave profile with a subtle berm appearing in the February surveys (14 and 28 February; Supplementary Figure 4). Importantly, while the storm events between 1 and 14 March (Storms 1 and 2) did not result in a substantial reduction in beach volume (Figure 2d), the beach profile was modified to a concave geometry (Supplementary Figure 4). This concave profile featured a ramp-like morphology that could be more conducive to wave runup amplification, potentially promoting foredune overtopping (Holman and Guza, Reference Holman and Guza1984).

Figure 3. Selected beach surveys from Profile 1 and Profile 3 showing changes to the beach morphology between January 2022 and January 2023. Vertical black arrows indicate the position of scarps which developed as a result of the June 2016 storm events and the storms in August 2020.

During the intense storm event of early April (Storm 3; Table 1), wave overtopping of the foredune occurred and the driftwood on the back of the beach, brought by the March floods during Storms 1 and 2, was carried over the 5-m-high frontal dune and into the swale behind (Supplementary Figure 5). Interestingly, at P1 there was minimal overtopping, and debris was instead deposited at the base of the scarp, which was almost 2 m high and present in all surveys prior to the event (17 January to 28 March). Immediately prior to Storm 3 in early April and in contrast to P1, the other profiles (P2, P3 and P4) were all in a healthy condition with low mounds of sand covered by Spinifex sericirus extending several metres seawards of the degraded and vegetated scarp from events in 2020. Three things are significant here; first, there was no sand carried over the foredune with the driftwood; second, there was no evidence of any backwash or return flow; and third, damage to the beach was only moderate, with the Spinifex-covered backshore trimmed back by ~5 m at P2, P3 and P4 creating a ~ 0.5–1.5-m-high scarp while at P1, the existing ~2-m-high scarp shifted subtly inland by ~1 m. At all profiles, the beach was planed down and steepened as a result of this event. Following that event until the end of June, the beach recovered slightly, building vertically and seaward under modal wave conditions (Figures 2b, c and 3).

The beach–foredune survey of 14 July 2022, immediately after the storm events that occurred in early July (see Section 3.1 above), revealed the loss of the foredune datums at P3 and P4 as the +3 m intercept shifted ~7 m inland, removing a large portion of the foredune complex (Figure 2e). In contrast, there was no appreciable change in the position of the pre-existing scarp at P1 (Figure 3), also reflected in the stability of the +3 m intercept (Figure 2e). During the July storms the foredune scarp and foreshore at the profile locations developed a distinctive crenulate morphology resembling megacusps with indentations spaced 250–300 m apart which persisted into August 2022. While the beach morphology has since lost this crenulate morphology, it is still visible in the position of the foredune toe/vegetation line even in 2023 (Figure 1e; Supplementary Figures 10 and 11). The reasons for this consistent but relatively small-scale variability is discussed below.

During the remainder of July and throughout August and September, there were no further storm wave events and yet beach–foredune surveys in August show further landward shifts in the position of the +3 m intercept at P2, P3 and P4 (Figure 2e). The November survey recorded a defined berm between +2 and 2.5 m at all four profiles indicating the beginning of beach recovery (Figure 3; Supplementary Figure 6). Sand from this berm was starting to move into the backshore and the process of rebuilding has continued throughout 2023 with a berm achieving its maximum dimensions of 15–20 m width and ~ 2.1–2.2 m height in November 2023. In December 2023 and January 2024, this berm has been again planed down but substantial transfer has occurred landwards to recover the backshore and repair the scarp left by the 2022 events. Despite this rebuilding phase, the dune morphology of P2, P3 and P4 is very different with the foredune partially removed at P2 and completely removed at P3 and P4 (Figure 3; Supplementary Figures 6 and 9).

Beach volume change in 2022

The ramp morphology produced after the March events (Storms 1 and 2) and the overtopping, backshore trimming and beach steepening caused by the early April event (Storm 3) had the least impact in terms of volume on P3 and P4. Overall, the volume change from Storms 1 and 2 was minimal while the impact of the event in early April 2022 (Storm 3) eroded an average of 38 m3/m from the beach–foredune (average volume loss from P1–P4). The beach stabilised and recovered slightly, before the back-to-back storms in early July (Storms 4 and 5) caused more beach–foredune erosion, such that by August, on average, a further 47 m3/m of sand had been removed. Thus by mid-August 2022, a net volume of approximately 78 m3/m of sand had been eroded from the beach–foredune system.

What is especially striking about the changes observed at Bengello Beach in 2022 is the different behaviour of P1 compared with P2, P3 and P4. While P1 lost some sand, especially after Storm 3, subsequent volume change was relatively modest compared to P2 and especially P3 and P4. Comparing the volume change observed for P1–P4 between the January 2022 survey and the survey in mid-August 2022, we see that P1 lost 49 m3/m, P2 lost 90 m3/m, P3 lost 98 m3/m, P4 lost 75 m3/m.

Discussion

Temporal and spatial variability of storm impacts

The beach–foredune sand loss that occurred in 2022 appears to be a culminating phase of erosion events which began in 2020. Storms in February and July–August of 2020 removed ~70 m3/m of sand from the beach–foredune (Figure 2a). The recovery phase during late 2020, through 2021 and into the beginning of 2022, was only modest, such that beach–foredune volume in early 2022 (January–February) had not returned to the 2020 level (Figure 2a). Thus, the events of 2022 in the context of the previous 2 years (2020–2021) meant that the impact of the storms in April and July 2022 achieved what significant storms in previous years had not – the destruction of the foredune at two of the four profiles and the lowest beach–foredune volumes observed since June 1979 (Figure 4a; McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023). Since the early 1980s when the foredune developed, all change occurred on the seaward side of this foredune, and now for the first time since, there is wave influence reaching the swale formally sheltered by the foredune.

Figure 4. (a) Ensemble beach volumes relative to starting volume in January 1972 through to August 2023 from McLean et al. (Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023). (b) Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) from 1972 to 2023 where sustained positive SOI values, especially above the threshold, indicate La Niña conditions while negative SOI values below the threshold indicate El Niño conditions. The data has been fitted with a 5-month moving mean. (c) Southern Annular Mode (SAM) index from 1972 to 2023 after Marshall (Reference Marshall2003) where during positive phases of SAM, the strong westerly winds of the mid to high southern latitudes shift south which generally increases the rainfall in southeastern Australia. During negative phases of SAM, this belt of strong westerly winds shifts northward decreasing rainfall in southeastern Australia. There are differences in the distribution of rainfall during the positive and negative phases of SAM depending on where the positive or negative occurs in summer or winter. (d) Monthly average water levels from the Fort Denison tide gauge in Sydney with a 12-month moving average and a 5-year moving average plotted through the data.

The five storms in 2022 had differing impacts on the beach–foredune system. Storm 3 had the greatest wave power and wave direction, was aligned with the shoreline and also the highest TWL (Table 1). This resulted in foredune overtopping at all profiles, although only 38 m3/m of erosion on average. Storm 5 caused the greatest morphologic impact to the beach–foredune, and this storm stands out from the others, as although it had moderate wave energy, nearshore wave heights exceeded deepwater wave heights and it was the only storm that had strong and persistent onshore winds (Table 1; Supplementary Figure 7). It is worth considering the duration of the five storms, as both Storms 3 and 5 stand out considering cumulative storm wave energy flux for Hsig > 3 m (Table 1), although Storm 5 which caused foredune destruction is still only half as powerful as Storm 3 using this metric. Variability in TWL between the four profiles during the July storms (Storms 4 and 5) may have contributed to differing beach–foredune impact and erosion volumes by controlling the intensity of wave attack of the dunes. During these events in July, P1 had the lowest TWLs (0.3–0.5 m lower than the other profiles; Table 1) and experienced minimal foredune erosion, while P3 experienced the most (see Section 4.2 above). In contrast, during Storm 3 (April), the TWLs calculated at the four profiles were reasonably consistent and foredune overtopping and moderate erosion occurred at all profiles.

Thus overall, although Storm 3 (April) was more powerful and had higher TWLs than the others (Table 1), the July storms produced more dramatic morphological changes to most of the profiles (Figure 3). Others have noted how a relative lower-energy storm event may result in substantial beach–foredune erosion due to the synchronisation of waves, tides and winds (Guisado-Pintado and Jackson, Reference Guisado-Pintado and Jackson2018). Furthermore, Rangel-Buitrago and Anfuso (Reference Rangel-Buitrago and Anfuso2011) show that more moderate storm events can still produce important morphological changes to the berm and foreshore while more severe events impact the foredune. In 2022 at Bengello, Storms 1 and 2 removed a berm and lowered the foreshore, enabling foredune erosion and overtopping in Storm 3, and foredune destruction at several profiles in Storms 4–5. Thus morphological “work” was achieved even with moderate storm events and likely enhanced the impact of later more severe events emphasising the importance of antecedent beach conditions (Splinter et al., Reference Splinter, Carley, Golshani and Tomlinson2014).

The spatial variability of the impact of Storm 5, expressed in the crenulate scarp and beach–foredune megacusps, may have been influenced by variation in dune vegetation (species, condition, percent coverage) and overall dune morphology (Davidson et al., Reference Davidson, Hesp and da Silva2020), although in this instance the rhythmicity of the crenulate scarp and its expression in the foreshore suggests beach and surf zone morphodynamics are more likely. Castelle et al. (Reference Castelle, Marieu, Bujan, Splinter, Robinet, Sénéchal and Ferreira2015) note the importance of megacusps in controlling variable dune erosion whereby erosion is exacerbated at the head of the megacusp embayment and state that antecedent morphology of the surf zone bars is important. Megacusp development leading to variable profile response to Storms 4 and 5 at Bengello may have resulted from the development of rip embayments just prior to these events as shown by Sentienel-2 satellite images. These images also show a rip embayment that persisted throughout July and August adjacent to P3 and led to further landward migration of the foredune scarp (Figure 3; Supplementary Figures 6 and 10).

Climatic conditions 2020–2022

It is worth considering how the climatic conditions corresponding to the 2020–2022 period may have contributed to the observed changes at Bengello Beach. Although the foredune has been regularly scarped by storm events since its development, the survey programme has not documented such drastic change as the destruction of the foredune itself. Figure 2 shows two timeseries of relevant climatic indices which influence metocean conditions in this region (Harley et al., Reference Harley, Turner, Short and Ranasinghe2010; Browning and Goodwin, Reference Browning and Goodwin2013; Barnard et al., Reference Barnard, Short, Harley, Splinter, Vitousek, Turner, Allan, Banno, Bryan, Doria, Hansen, Kato, Kuriyama, Randall-Goodwin, Ruggiero, Walker and Heathfield2015; Mortlock and Goodwin, Reference Mortlock and Goodwin2016). These climatic patterns have been linked to shoreline behaviour over both local (Ibaceta et al., Reference Ibaceta, Harley, Turner and Splinter2023) and regional spatial scales (Vos et al., Reference Vos, Harley, Turner and Splinter2023a). Considering the three-year period from the beginning of 2020 to the end of 2022, a strong la Niña phase (positive SOI) is indicated and was popularly described as a “triple dip” La Niña. An accompanying “triple dip” positive SAM whose peaks corresponded to the austral spring–summer seasons also occurred during this period. The combined period of overlap was from October 2020 through to March 2023 totalling 30 months (SOI and SAM 5-month moving averages >0). This combined positive SOI (La Niña phase) and positive peaks of SAM have occurred at other times, although in many cases these two indices are out of phase. Where they are aligned, beach–foredune response is variable. The two other periods where they corresponded for the longest time actually show accretion (Figure 4). However, several shorter periods of overlap do correspond to erosion, for example, during the 1970s (Figure 4ac).

Recent studies have suggested links between these climate cycles and more energetic wave conditions for southeastern Australia. For example, Marshall et al. (Reference Marshall, Hemer, Hendon and McInnes2018) show that positive phases of SAM during austral summer appear to produce a slight increase in Hsig along the southeastern coast of Australia as more wave energy propagates into the Tasman Sea. Godoi and Torres Júnior (Reference Godoi and Torres Júnior2020) show that when positive SAM in austral summer corresponds with a La Niña phase, there is an increase in Hsig of between 0.2 and 0.4 m in the northern Tasman Sea and increase of between 0.3 and 0.6 s in wave period along the length of the NSW coast. Studies have also associated changes in the frequency of extreme events in this region with changing climatic conditions. For instance, Browning and Goodwin (Reference Browning and Goodwin2013) have shown that extratropical cyclones which form and intensify in the Tasman Sea, and are associated with severe beach erosion along this coastline, occur more frequently during positive ENSO. Overall, the correlation between what could be termed the “double triple dip” (three consecutive positive SAM phases during summer combined with three consecutive phases of La Nina) and the response of Bengello Beach is at present a correlation, not causation. However, it is certainly an intriguing one.

The future for Bengello Beach

For Bengello Beach and other shorelines of this region, we note the threats posed by projected climate change influencing wave height and direction with potential for intensification of seasonal and climatic patterns (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Meucci and Young2023) as well as the impact of projected sea level rise over the coming century. The Fort Denison tide gauge recorded a sea level rise of 2.5 mm/yr over the past ~20 years (Figure 4d), and McLean et al. (Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023) noted a subtle but steady decline in beach–foredune volume from ~2010 onwards. The events of 2022 have further extended this trend (Figure 4a).

Arriving at Bengello Beach in 2022 soon after the July storm events, we were surprised to find the foredune removed at two profiles. (We use the term “surprise” deliberately, defined as a “low-likelihood” event (Chen et al., Reference Chen, Rojas, Samset, Cobb, Niang, Edwards, Emori, Faria, Hawkins, Hope, Huybrechts, Meinshausen, Mustafa, Plattner, Tréguier, Masson-Delmotte, Zhai, Pirani, Connors, Péan, Berger, Caud, Chen, Goldfarb, Gomis, Huang, Leitzell, Lonnoy, Matthews, Maycock, Waterfield, Yelekçi, Yu and Zhou2021, p. 203).) We anticipated that the foredune, which developed in the 1980s, would persist into the future. The broader historical and geological context supported this view. Firstly, the contemporary foredune had persisted for the past 40 years despite many other severe storm events and was a well-established feature of the profile morphology. Secondly, at this site, foredunes have been shown to persist for >100 years before being stranded behind another (Oliver et al., Reference Oliver, Dougherty, Gliganic and Woodroffe2015). While it is possible that destruction and rebuilding could occur during the ~100-year foredune evolution, it has not been evident from detailed morphostratigraphic studies (Oliver, Reference Oliver2016; Tamura et al., Reference Tamura, Oliver, Cunningham and Woodroffe2019). Thus, what happened in 2022 at Bengello Beach was a surprising morphologic outcome and an abrupt change in the beach–foredune morphology. At a site where foredune building has been documented over millennia, centuries and decades (Oliver et al., Reference Oliver, Dougherty, Gliganic and Woodroffe2015; Tamura et al., Reference Tamura, Oliver, Cunningham and Woodroffe2019; McLean et al., Reference McLean, Thom, Shen and Oliver2023), foredune destruction is a profound outcome and raises the question: are we seeing the beginning of a system state tipping point being reached? If this is the case, there may be a need to recalibrate expectations on the future of sandy shorelines.

Conclusion

This study has documented the dramatic change in beach–foredune morphology at Bengello Beach during 2022. The results show that a series of five storms from March to July caused foredune overtopping and beach erosion culminating in the removal of the foredune at two of the four profiles. Deepwater and nearshore wave recordings from these five events show that differences in wave power, duration and direction were related to beach–foredune response with overtopping and erosion occurring in April and foredune destruction occurring in July. We also found that Profile 1, which is only ~350 m south of Profile 3, behaved very differently in response to the same wave forcing. Overall, the events of 2022 appear to be a culminating phase of beach–foredune response to the period from 2020 to the end of 2021, where insufficient recovery occurred between successive storm events, exposing the foredune toe to repeated wave impact. Broader climatic conditions may have promoted more energetic wave conditions in the Tasman Sea leading to these successive storms and lack of time for beach recovery. This means that, looking to the future, modelling of storm demand for beaches needs to be nuanced to such a degree as to incorporate this variability. Assessments of foredune morphology are also critical in understanding erosion risk. Furthermore, there is a need to better understand beach recovery including its rates and style, so more tailored adaptation measures can be developed for a changing climate.

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/cft.2024.8.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at http://doi.org/10.1017/cft.2024.8.

Data availability statement

The beach profiling data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, TO, upon reasonable request. Supplementary data has been provided to further support the main article. SAM monthly index data is available from https://legacy.bas.ac.uk/met/gjma/sam.html. SOI data is available from the Commonwealth of Australia Bureau of Meteorology via www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi/. Water level data from Fort Denison tide gauge is available from www.bom.gov.au/oceanography/projects/ntc/monthly.

Deepwater wave data from the Batemans Bay Waverider buoy were collected and provided by Manly Hydraulics Laboratory on behalf of the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) through the NSW Coastal Data Network Programme. Data are available on request to MHL. Nearshore wave data from the Bengello wave buoy were collected and provided by the NSW Department of Planning and Environment’s Coastal and Marine Science Team. Nearshore wave data are available from the NSW Sharing and Enabling Environmental Data (SEED) portal: https://datasets.seed.nsw.gov.au/dataset/nsw-nearshore-wave-buoy-parameter-time-series-data-completed-deployments.

Acknowledgements

We wish to thank Brad Morris (Coast and Marine team, DCCEEW) for processing and QA/QC of raw shallowwater wave buoy data. We are grateful to Eurobodalla Shire Council for continuing to allow access to the survey site. We thank Prof. Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick for advice and direction regarding relevant literature on climatic indices in this region.

Author contribution

All authors have made substantial contributions to this submission. Dr. Oliver and Prof. McLean conducted the land-based fieldwork and analysis and Dr. Oliver drafted much of the paper and created the figures. Dr. Kinsela and Dr. Doyle led the on-water fieldwork and analysed the wave and wind data and helped draft the methodology and results sections dealing with this data as well as substantially revising the discussion. Drs. Oliver, Kinsela and Doyle created the supplementary figures which support the paper.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. The School of Science at UNSW Canberra supported the field components of this research.

Competing interest

The authors declare no competing interests exist.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. (a, b, c) Location of Bengello Beach in southeastern Australia and the location of the four profiles (P1–P4) monitored since January 1972 demarcated on Nearmap imagery from May 2022 (d) and March 2023 (e). Photos (f, g, h) showing the destruction of the foredune at Profile 3 (P3) with photo location and direction of view indicated in (d) and (e). Yellow arrows in (e) indicate the alongshore variation in foredune scarp position which developed in response to the July storms (Storms 4 and 5) and the associated megacusps which were present in the foreshore at this time (see Supplementary Figure 10).

Figure 1

Table 1. Storm events of 2022 recorded by the Batemans Bay wave buoy and Bengello wave buoy. The cells highlighted by underlining show that for Storm 5, the Bengello nearshore wave buoy had a higher Hsig than that of the Batemans Bay deepwater wave buoy, whereas for all other storm events in 2022 the Batemans Bay buoy Hsig exceeded that of the Bengello buoy by ~1 m. Note that Hsig here refers to the spectral significant wave height while Hmax is a time domain parameter calculated using zero upcrossing method. Tp is the period associated with the frequency at the peak of the energy spectrum, that is, the frequency of highest energy density. For average direction, Dp has been used which is the direction corresponding to the peak of wave energy (also a spectral parameter) and is the average value for the period during which Hsig consecutively exceeds 3 m. Peak wave power is the peak value of the instantaneous wave power per metre alongshore which incorporates both Hsig and Tp to capture energy/power of the wave conditions. Cumulative storm wave energy flux for Hsig > 3 m is a measure of the total wave power directed at the shoreline during the period when Hsig exceeds 3 m and has been calculated following the method of Harley et al. (2017). Average wind strength and direction as well as rainfall is from the nearby Moruya Heads station. Peak TWL is shown for the March, April and July storm events (see Supplementary Figures 12 and 3)

Figure 2

Figure 2. (a) Hourly Hsig observations >3 m recorded by the Batemans Bay wave buoy for the period January 2020 through to March 2023 accompanied by beach volume change over the same time period relative to January 1972. (b) Recorded deepwater ocean wave conditions from the Batemans Bay wave buoy for the 2022 including significant wave height (Hsig), maximum wave height (Hmax) and wave direction (degrees). (c) Recorded nearshore wave conditions from ~13 m water depth adjacent to Bengello Beach including significant wave height (Hsig), maximum wave height (Hmax) and wave direction (degrees). (d) Change in beach volume over 2022 relative to the volume of the January survey for the four central beach profiles at Bengello. (e) Change in distance from the back datum to the +3 m intercept for each of the four central beach profiles at Bengello relative to the position in January 2022.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Selected beach surveys from Profile 1 and Profile 3 showing changes to the beach morphology between January 2022 and January 2023. Vertical black arrows indicate the position of scarps which developed as a result of the June 2016 storm events and the storms in August 2020.

Figure 4

Figure 4. (a) Ensemble beach volumes relative to starting volume in January 1972 through to August 2023 from McLean et al. (2023). (b) Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) from 1972 to 2023 where sustained positive SOI values, especially above the threshold, indicate La Niña conditions while negative SOI values below the threshold indicate El Niño conditions. The data has been fitted with a 5-month moving mean. (c) Southern Annular Mode (SAM) index from 1972 to 2023 after Marshall (2003) where during positive phases of SAM, the strong westerly winds of the mid to high southern latitudes shift south which generally increases the rainfall in southeastern Australia. During negative phases of SAM, this belt of strong westerly winds shifts northward decreasing rainfall in southeastern Australia. There are differences in the distribution of rainfall during the positive and negative phases of SAM depending on where the positive or negative occurs in summer or winter. (d) Monthly average water levels from the Fort Denison tide gauge in Sydney with a 12-month moving average and a 5-year moving average plotted through the data.

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Author comment: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R0/PR1

Comments

20th December 2023

Dr Thomas Oliver

Senior Lecturer

School of Science

The University of New South Wales Canberra

Northcott Drive

Canberra ACT 2610

Australia

Dear Editor,

This letter accompanies a manuscript that I and my co-authors wish to be considered for publication in the journal Coastal Futures. The manuscript is titled:

‘Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia’

This paper offers a fresh perspective on a long-term beach/ foredune monitoring site in southeastern Australia and presents the remarkable changes we observed in 2022. The paper presents a robust dataset of beach/foredune monitoring data accompanied by a unique combination of both deep-water and nearshore wave observations which characterise the successive storms that caused beach/foredune change.

We lost a foredune whose development this same survey program had documented. This is to our knowledge an unprecedented record. In exploring these changes and their causes, we shed light on the future of open sandy coastlines around the world and challenge readers to recalibrate their notion of expected change.

We believe the manuscript will be of wide appeal given it deals with both beach and foredune change and coastal storms in a globally common coastline type: sandy beaches.

All authors have made substantial contributions to this submission. Dr Oliver and Roger McLean conducted the fieldwork and field data analysis and Dr Oliver drafted most of the paper and figures. Dr Kinsela and Dr Doyle analysed the wind and wave data and helped draft the methodology and results sections dealing with this data as well as providing many of the supplementary figures.

We thank you for your consideration of this manuscript for publication. We look forward to receiving your response.

Kind regards,

Dr Thomas Oliver

Recommendation: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R0/PR2

Comments

Dear authors,

I have read your paper and the reviews of the other 2 reviewers. I agree with the sentiments of the reviewers and think more could be done to tighten up this story you are presenting here. It is a fascinating data set. Why focus just on 2022 (as asked by R2) or if you only focus on this, why include such a discussion on the longer term data set (R1). Flipping back an forth can blur the story that you are trying to tell your readers. Focussing on the 2022 storms, it would be great to see more information to correspond to the inshore wave forcing/dynamics to help put the variability a bit more into context. Similarly, given we are now a year out (still not much), recovery could use a bit more discussion I feel.

Overall I think the paper can provide a nice contribution to the literature and upon addressing the comments of myself and your reviewers could be considered for this journal.

All the best,

Kristen Splinter

Senior Editor, Coastal Futures

Decision: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R0/PR3

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R1/PR4

Comments

Dear Editor,

This letter accompanies the revised manuscript (CFT-23-0026) that I and my co-authors wish to be considered for publication in the journal Coastal Futures. The manuscript is titled:

‘Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia’

We have revised the paper in accordance with the reviewers and also handling editor and believe these revisions have improved the strength and coherence of the manuscript. Foremost in these revisions is the restructuring of the discussion and the re-ordering of the figures so that it is obvious that our analysis deals with the events in 2022 and its immediate context (Results), while the data from the 50-year survey program features in the discussion. We have also clarified this in the methodology section.

All authors have made substantial contributions to this submission and have assisted in revising the manuscript.

We thank you for your consideration of this manuscript for publication. We look forward to receiving your response.

Kind regards,

Dr Thomas Oliver

Recommendation: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R1/PR5

Comments

Handling Editor Comments:

Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia

Dear Dr. Oliver and co-authors,

Thank you for your resubmission. As noted by the 2 reviewers, you have done a reasonable job at addressing the comments provided by both. One is happy with the manuscript as is and the other still requests some reasonable changes. I note that in several of your responses you cite the word limitation as an inhibitor for being able to address the requested change. This is something I will bring back to the management as I feel that paper could still be improved if more of these suggestions could have been included. Overall I am recommending this is returned for additional Minor revisions.

A key point made in your response was the focus on the 2022 event and that reframing of the paper, with adequate references to the McLean (2023) work. In taking this into account, I would suggest lines 21-23 (“The development of this same foredune has been documented by the survey program and thus we lost a foredune we watched being built. This survey program is thus to our knowledge an unprecedented record of both foredune development and destruction.”) should be removed as they refer to the longer survey program that is not the focus of this work. Rather, if backed up by the data, perhaps you could say that the foredune section of the beach was at its lowest volume with the 40+ year record of data available at this site. I would welcome a 1-line comparison to the 1974 storms that are historically known in this area for having been quite destructive. I have to loosely assume without looking at the data that 1974 may have been the last time the foredune was completely lost? This is somewhat alluded to in the abstract but I think you could make direct reference to the 1974 series of storms here as they were quite notable. This would indeed be a great add to the impact statement. However I note that in your discussion (5.1) you say that it’s the late 1970s when it was last this small wrt foredune volumes so perhaps nothing can be said about 1974.

I would also suggest the tone could be softened a little in the abstract. The word drastically, exceptional, etc are a bit sensationalist. eg. L36-38: “Beach recovery has since occurred, but not yet rebuilt the foredune and the overall morphology at two of the four profiles is drastically different. The different profile response was exceptional with respect to the >50-yearmonitoring program which had also documented the building of this foredune”. Too much of this and it starts to read more like a sensationalist news article rather than an academic journal article in my opinion.

As noted by R2 – subheadings should include more than a paragraph (eg. 5.1). Consider less headings and how this can be framed into more general themes.

L327 – please don’t use authors initials here to refer to yourselves. I would just say the co-authors (or we) Also L413.

5.2 – I would consider how the forcing can be included within your results to present these together. As noted by the reviewers, estimates of TWL (tides+non-tidal residuals+setup+R2) are key to understanding the dune/foredune erosion and I still feel should be included. This helps to provide the ‘why’ it has happened rather than just presenting the beach volume changes. Max TWL will also change from profile to profile, also providing some assistance. Your co-author (Kinsela) should also have access to the higher resolution NSW wave model to get estimates of waves at each profile and not just at a buoy location. The lack of this analysis is still a major weakness of this work in my opinion.

5.3 – I appreciate you say you can’t add more, but if your data shows that there was no time/ability for the beach to recover between these events and I think there is a case for clustering to be a driver here.

5.4 – even if bathy is not available, satellites (Nearmap, Planet, or Landsat) could all help provide some insight here into pre-storm conditions.

L413: why is “surprised” in italics? Are scientists allowed to be surprised? These were big events. Some level of impact had to have been expected.

Decision: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R2/PR7

Comments

See file attached to submission.

Recommendation: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R2/PR8

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Foredune erosion, overtopping and destruction in 2022 at Bengello Beach, southeastern Australia — R2/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.