4.5 Article

Determining Spatial and Temporal Inputs of Freshwater, Including Submarine Groundwater Discharge, to a Subtropical Estuary Using Geochemical Tracers, Biscayne Bay, South Florida

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 694-708

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-009-9155-y

Keywords

Groundwater; Isotopes; Trace metals; Geochemistry; Florida; Submarine groundwater discharge

Funding

  1. Florida Seagrant Project [R/C-E-51]
  2. The National Park Service
  3. Richard Curry of Biscayne National Park
  4. The Florida International University Graduate School Dissertation Year Fellowship
  5. National Science Foundation [DBI-0620409, DEB-9910514]
  6. Stable Isotope Laboratory at the University of Miami

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Geochemical mixing models were used to decipher the dominant source of freshwater (rainfall, canal discharge, or groundwater discharge) to Biscayne Bay, an estuary in south Florida. Discrete samples of precipitation, canal water, groundwater, and bay surface water were collected monthly for 2 years and analyzed for salinity, stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen, and Sr2+/Ca2+ concentrations. These geochemical tracers were used in three separate mixing models and then combined to trace the magnitude and timing of the freshwater inputs to the estuary. Fresh groundwater had an isotopic signature (delta O-18 = -2.66aEuro degrees, delta D -7.60aEuro degrees) similar to rainfall (delta O-18 = -2.86aEuro degrees, delta D = -4.78aEuro degrees). Canal water had a heavy isotopic signature (delta O-18 = -0.46aEuro degrees, delta D = -2.48aEuro degrees) due to evaporation. This made it possible to use stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen to separate canal water from precipitation and groundwater as a source of freshwater into the bay. A second model using Sr2+/Ca2+ ratios was developed to discern fresh groundwater inputs from precipitation inputs. Groundwater had a Sr2+/Ca2+ ratio of 0.07, while precipitation had a dissimilar ratio of 0.89. When combined, these models showed a freshwater input ratio of canal/precipitation/groundwater of 37%:53%:10% in the wet season and 40%:55%:5% in the dry season with an error of +/- 25%. For a bay-wide water budget that includes saltwater and freshwater mixing, fresh groundwater accounts for 1-2% of the total fresh and saline water input.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available