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A Review of 50 Years of Study of Hydrology, Wetland Dynamics, Aquatic Metabolism, Water Quality and Trophic Status, and Nutrient Biogeochemistry in the Barataria Basin, Mississippi Delta-System Functioning, Human Impacts and Restoration Approaches

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13050642

Keywords

Barataria Basin; Mississippi Delta; trophic state; denitrification; eutrophication; forested wetlands; restoration

Funding

  1. NIFA/USDA [SC-1700590]
  2. NASA-EPSCoR [80NSSC18M002]
  3. US Department of the Interior-South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center (SC-CASC) [G12 AC00002]

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Human activities have significantly altered the hydrology of the economically and ecologically important Barataria Basin in the Mississippi Delta, leading to water quality degradation and wetland loss. Restoration efforts will involve reconnecting waterways with wetlands, implementing sediment diversions, and restoring barrier islands.
Here we review an extensive series of studies of Barataria Basin, an economically and ecologically important coastal basin of the Mississippi Delta. Human activity has greatly altered the hydrology of the basin by decreasing riverine inflows from leveeing of the river and its distributaries, increasing runoff with high nutrient concentrations from agricultural fields, and channelization of wetlands of the basin interior that has altered flow paths to often bypass wetlands. This has resulted in degraded water quality in the upper basin and wetland loss in the lower basin. Trophic state analysis found the upper basin to be eutrophic and the lower basin to be mesotrophic. Gross aquatic primary production (GAPP) was highest in the upper basin, lowest in the mid basin, and intermediate in the lower basin. Forested wetlands in the upper basin have degraded over the past several decades due to increased periods of flooding, while there has been massive loss of emergent wetlands in the lower basin due to increasing water levels and pervasive alteration of hydrology. Restoration will entail reconnection of waterways with surrounding wetlands in the upper basin, and implementation of river sediment diversions, marsh creation using dredged sediments and barrier island restoration. Findings from this review are discussed in terms of the functioning of deltas globally.

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