Ala Moana Regional Park visitors may be looking forward to the wider, softer shoreline after a $10 million sand replenishment project scheduled for next year.
But the benefits to beachgoers won鈥檛 come without sacrifice. The small creatures that live in the sand 鈥 such as worms, crabs and shrimp 鈥 are facing likely death, according to researchers from the University of California San Diego.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not a desert,鈥 said Joshua R. Kohn, a professor of ecology, behavior and evolution. 鈥淭here are things that live there, they鈥檙e all invertebrates, and piling sand on top of them tends to kill them.鈥
This potential downside was not addressed in the city’s environmental impact statement, but Kohn and another scientist who studied beach replenishment in California 鈥 and found the practice to be lethal to some organisms 鈥 said their findings would likely hold true for Hawaii.
Their conclusions are supported by several , including one in Australia in which researchers observed “samples collected two days after the conclusion of nourishment were entirely .”听
Beach replenishment, also called sand nourishment, involves loading sand onto eroded beaches. It鈥檚 considered a more eco-friendly alternative to other solutions like sea walls that can exacerbate erosion, but it can have some undesired consequences, 蝉迟补迟别蝉.听
Kohn and his colleagues studied eight beaches in San Diego County. Each had sections that were replenished and areas that were not, creating a unique opportunity for a well-designed controlled experiment.听
Beach replenishment hit invertebrates hard, according to their study. Even 15 months after the sand nourishment project was complete, the number of invertebrates was still down by about half, Kohn said.听
Even if humans don’t notice the losses, they can affect the larger ecosystem, said Brock Wooldridge, a Kailua native and Punahou School graduate who studied San Diego鈥檚 beaches with Kohn.听
鈥淭hey鈥檙e an important food item for the birds walking in the sand poking their beaks in, and when the tide rises, little fish are also eating these creatures,鈥 said Wooldridge, who is pursuing a Ph.D at Harvard University. 鈥淚f they don鈥檛 have their food, it could potentially have cascading effects. You could see a general decline in the health of the ecosystem starting from the ground up.鈥澛
Bouncing back from sand replenishment
At Ala Moana, the plan is to dredge an estimated 70,000 cubic yards of sand from an offshore site 2,000 feet makai of the closest surf break, according to the city parks and recreation department. With enough sand to fill 21 Olympic swimmings pools, it will be one of the largest beach nourishment projects in Hawaii history, according to data collected by the .听
According to Wooldridge, there is no question organisms at Ala Moana will die.
鈥淭he part where there鈥檚 uncertainty is the time and scale of recovery,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ithout a doubt, immediately after this renourishment project, anything living in the sand there is going to be in a tough place.鈥
The for Ala Moana park improvements, which includes the sand nourishment project, was released on Friday. It makes no mention of invertebrates being buried in the sand or how their population loss would impact the ecosystem.
The report states the water is home to 鈥渃opious amounts of Hawaiian seagrass鈥 and swimmers like damselfish, whitespotted puffer, long-spine porcupinefish, spotted boxfish, Chinese trumpetfish, triggerfish and the Moorish idol 鈥 the kinds of fish that delight snorkelers.听During a survey by project consultants, several threatened green sea turtles were spotted in the area. Endangered species like the humpback whale and Hawaiian monk seal are known to live in Hawaiian waters, the EIS states, but they were not observed during an Ala Moana survey.
The EIS did not indicate these animals would be threatened by the sand replenishment project other than saying new sand will cover some coral on the shoreline, 鈥渞esulting in a loss of habitat for juvenile fish.鈥 The report outlines several recommendations to minimize potential impacts. If “proper management and mitigation practices” are employed, a survey included in the EIS concluded that the project “should have little or no potential for significant permanent effects to the existing marine environment.”
The city decided the rewards outweighed the risks.
“We understand there will be some effect, but we believe it鈥檚 on such a minimal level it’s acceptable for the benefit,” said Robert Kroning, director of the department of design and construction.听
Already Impacted
In Hawaii, environmental concerns aren鈥檛 the only consideration when planning a beach replenishment project, said Sam Lemmo, administrator of the Hawaii Office of Conservation and Coastal Lands.
鈥淧eople recognize Hawaii for its beaches. It鈥檚 an important amenity for us, for people who live here and our visitor industry,鈥 said Lemmo, whose office is part of the Department of Land and Natural Resources. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something we need to invest in on a continual basis to keep ourselves competitive.鈥
Beach restoration projects should be considered on a case-by-case basis, Lemmo said. Ala Moana was a good candidate, he said. Like Waikiki, it was already an 鈥渁rtificial beach.鈥澛
鈥淚f you said there is a beautiful, pristine coral reef, I鈥檓 talking about a valuable coral ecosystem, and this beach restoration project is going to cover this, that could be problematic,鈥 he said. 鈥淥r if you wanted to do something in a prime monk seal pup area or turtle habitat. You can get into situations where you have issues authorizing projects like that.鈥澛
But Ala Moana is already 鈥渉ighly impacted鈥 by human activity, he said. In other words, there鈥檚 not much to lose.
鈥淭he system is not exactly a pristine natural system,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e looking at, basically, what鈥檚 in the sand and what鈥檚 in the immediate near-shore area in the channel. Frankly, there is probably not that much going on.鈥
Asked about the findings in San Diego, Lemmo said: 鈥I don鈥檛 agree with the scientist on that one.鈥澛
鈥淲hen you do the renourishment, that whole thing equilibrates very quickly,鈥 Lemmo said. 鈥淎ll the organisms will adjust to that environment. It鈥檚 not that big of a deal.鈥澛
A Waikiki nourishment project by DLNR added 24,000 cubic yards of sand to the beach in 2012. In a survey done afterward, researchers did not find statistically significant differences in counts of corals, sea urchins, sea cucumbers or invertebrates, according to a report provided by Lemmo. However, total species diversity 鈥渟ignificantly decreased鈥 in the impacted area when compared to a control area.听
“When they say that diversity decreased, I don鈥檛 think they are saying that it decreased because of the project,” he said in an email. “There was just less diversity there.”
Since Ala Moana is a man-made shoreline with no natural way of replenishing, it will need repeated sand imports, according to the parks department. With sea level rise and the continuation of extreme climate conditions, parks department spokesman Nathan Serota said it鈥檚 difficult to say when the next replenishment will be. Estimates range from 20 to 30 years.听
Kohn said more research is needed to learn about how these projects impact ecosystems in the long run.听
鈥淩eplenishment doesn鈥檛 usually last very long, but they have to replenish again in a few years,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat we really don鈥檛 know is the long term effects, particularly with repeated replenishment.鈥
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Christina Jedra is a journalist for Civil Beat focused on investigative and in-depth reporting. You can reach her by email at cjedra@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .