In the South, Sea Level Rise Accelerates at Some of the Most Extreme Rates on Earth – Inside Climate News

The surge is startling scientists, amplifying impacts such as hurricane storm surges and nuisance flooding and testing mitigation measures like the Resilient Florida program…
Mangrove Trees Are on the Move, Taking the Tropics with Them – Scientific American

As the climate warms, mangroves are migrating farther poleward, transforming the coast as they go…
Rancho Palos Verdes landslide is creating a new beach. ‘It’s unreal’ – the Los Angeles Times

There’s an entirely new coastline in Rancho Palos Verdes…
How Florida is Getting Back Its Pink | Interactive – the Washington Post

When Keith Ramos heard a small flock of American flamingos had landed last fall at the nature preserve he oversees off Florida’s Atlantic coast, he rushed to get a once-in-a-lifetime glimpse of the gangly pink birds in the wild…
Beach Nourishment: A Critical Look – Gary Griggs | Journal of Coastal Research

More than $15 billion, mostly federal dollars, have been spent moving sand to the shoreline for both recreational and shoreline protection benefits. Still, whether in New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Florida, or California, the life span of the sand added artificially to these beaches in many cases has been relatively short and in some instances has been less than a year…
The homeowner mutiny leaving Florida cities defenseless against hurricanes – Grist Magazine

The Army Corps of Engineers won’t restore eroded beaches in Pinellas County unless homeowners agree to one condition: public access…
Washed Away – AARP

As more older Americans move to the coasts, rising seas are wiping out their homes — and retirement dreams…
DeSantis signs bill scrubbing ‘climate change’ from Florida law – the Washington Times

Climate advocates said the bill is a bid for national attention from a Republican governor eager to use global warming as a culture war issue..
Add sand, lose sand, repeat. The climate conundrum for beaches – E&E News

Rebuilding beaches after hurricanes is costing U.S. taxpayers billions of dollars more than expected as the Army Corps of Engineers pumps mountains of sand onto storm-obliterated shorelines…