Dune erosion on Sable Island caused loss of groundwater along exposed coast - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Dune erosion on Sable Island caused loss of groundwater along exposed coast

New research underscoring the importance of dunes to the Sable Island's ecosystem shows when sand dunes disappear, so too does the underground freshwater supply.

'We don't see any freshwater right along the beach where that dune was lost,' researcher says

A person wearing a blue jacket stands on the sand with measuring equipment on a foggy day.
Researchers from Dalhousie University measured fresh water levels underneath Sable Island from 2019 to 2022 and compared the results to monitoring done in the 1970s. (Dalhousie University)

Where sand dunes disappear on Sable Island, so does the underground freshwater supply, according to new research underscoring the importance of dunes to the island's ecosystem.

The dunes serve as a natural barrier, protecting against the relentless waves and temporary salinization of groundwater caused by ocean flooding. Dunes also help refresh the water table by funnelling water from rain and snow into aquifers that, in some places, are 40 metres deep.

But on the south coast which is most exposed to storms, erosion and seawater flooding dunes have disappeared in recent decades.

And so too has a 10-metre layer of groundwater that used to lie underneath them, saidJulia Cantelon, a PhD candidate at Dalhousie University in Halifax in the department of civil and resource engineering.

Cantelon co-authored a study on saltwater intrusion on the remote Atlantic island located 290kilometres southeast ofHalifax.

It was published this month in the journal Water Resources Research.

Loss of fresh groundwater

"We don't see any freshwater right along the beach where that dune was lost. So we really see a trend where the dunes are lost along the south beach, we see a loss of fresh groundwater," saidCantelon.

"The fresh groundwater resources on the inland portion of the island where the dunes are healthy, we don't see that same decline."

Cantelon and other researchers from Dalhousie collected groundwater data between 2019 and 2022 and compared it to measurements taken 50 years ago.

A group of researchers are sit on the sand by a pool of water. There is grass near the sand.
Researchers found there is still fresh groundwater in the middle of the island. (Dalhousie University)

Without the dunes, a cycle of salt water inundation prevented replenishment of the freshwater supply along the south coast.

In hydrology, the supply is called a "lens" which is a convex-shaped layer of fresh water that floats above the denser saltwater underneath the island.

She estimates the south beach lens disappeared sometime between 1996 and 2014.

Stillfresh groundwater mid-island

The good news is that, in the middle of the island, there was no loss of fresh groundwater and the north beach has experienced localized loss.

"At present, our findings don't indicate any sort of dramatic groundwater loss that is going to have deleterious impacts to the ecosystem, but they are really important to show those connections between the land surface and the subsurface and help understand what might go on in the future or predict future losses," Cantelon said.

A person wearing a blue jacket crouches down on a beach with a measuring tool.
A Dalhousie University researcher studies groundwater on Sable Island. (Dalhousie University)

The next stage in her research is to look at theimpact of climate changewhich is expected to increase the forces that threaten dunes.

Sable Island National Park reserve is home to birds, plants, insects more than 400 feral horses.

Dune erosion on Sable Island caused loss of groundwater along exposed coast

12 months ago
Duration 1:43
New research underscoring the importance of dunes to the Sable Island's ecosystem shows when sand dunes disappear, so too does the underground freshwater supply. Paul Withers has the story.

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