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1.
Environ Monit Assess ; 195(1): 40, 2022 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36301373

ABSTRACT

The current study seeks to identify possible anthropogenic and/or natural environmental stressors that may account for the long-term decline of ecosystem health in Lavaca Bay, Texas, USA. The Formosa Plastics Corporation instituted monitoring of an industrial discharge into the bay with 16 fixed point stations and quarterly sampling from 1993 to 2020. Comprehensive measurements included organic and inorganic solutes in surface water, porewater and sediment, sediment content, plankton, nekton, and infaunal benthos. All parameter trends changed over time due to climate, freshwater inflow events, and/or seasonal changes. Biological community structure and sediment changed with distance from the discharge site. Dominance characterized community structure because three to four taxa comprised > 70% of individuals for nekton (trawl and gill net), phytoplankton, zooplankton, and ichthyoplankton samples. Sediment became sandier over time (48 to 75%) and away from the discharge. Surface water and porewater at reference (R) stations and stations near the discharge site had similar hydrographical and biological trends over time, indicating no long-term impact due to the discharge. However, 99.9% of 424,671 measurements of organic contaminants were non-detectable because the methods were insensitive to ambient concentrations. Thus, it is still not known if contaminants play a role in the long-term decline of ecosystem health in Lavaca Bay. Furthermore, only four R stations were sampled and were all 3810 m from the discharge site, so it is possible that trends in R stations do not represent the natural background. Future studies should include more R stations and lower detection limits for contaminants.


Subject(s)
Bays , Ecosystem , Humans , Environmental Monitoring , Texas , Water
2.
Sci Total Environ ; 823: 153814, 2022 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35157869

ABSTRACT

To determine how submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) magnitudes and composition (fresh or saline/recirculated) vary in nearshore low inflow estuaries across ⁓125 km of a semiarid coastline, this study assessed three south Texas estuaries, using radon [222Rn], radium [226Ra and 224Ra], and water isotopes [δ18O and δD]. Mass balance models of time-series 222Rn, found to be representative of total SGD in this study, revealed much higher SGD inputs to the Nueces Estuary (average [x̅] Nueces, Corpus Christi and Oso Bays: 120, 83, and 44 cm·d-1, respectively), attributed to anthropogenically-disturbed substrates and potentially surfacing growth-faults. The lowest 222Rn-derived SGD occurred in the Upper Laguna Madre Estuary (x̅: Upper Laguna Madre and Baffin Bay: 21 and 18 cm·d-1, respectively), explained by the drier climate, lower anthropogenic disturbance, and neighboring groundwater cone of depression. Aransas Bay in the Mission Aransas Estuary received greater average annual precipitation but exhibited low total SGD rates (x̅: 23 cm·d-1). Seasonally, average 222Rn-derived SGD rates increased following Hurricane Harvey (43 cm·d-1 in spring to 64 cm·d-1 in summer). In the Nueces Estuary, the overall 222Rn-derived SGDs were substantially higher than SGDs from 224Ra and 226Ra. The closer agreement between 224Ra and 222Rn-derived SGD and larger 224Ra rates in the Upper Laguna Madre Estuary, Aransas Bay and Oso Bay indicate that saline/recirculated SGD contributions were significant. Values of δ18O and δD confirm these types of inputs, with effects of evaporation/salinization more pronounced where recirculation was predominant and the opposite where terrestrial/222Rn-derived SGD inputs dominate. 226Ra-derived SGDs were lower than the 224Ra due to different behavior of the two isotopes while released into water following transport through saline and fine-grained estuarine sediments or due to wind-driven disturbances.


Subject(s)
Groundwater , Radium , Environmental Monitoring , Estuaries , Gulf of Mexico , Radium/analysis , Seawater
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 755(Pt 2): 142574, 2021 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33069908

ABSTRACT

Nutrient budgets in semi-arid estuaries, with ephemeral freshwater inflows and limited nutrient sources, are likely incomplete if contributions from submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) are not included. Here, the relative importance of saline/recirculated SGD-derived nutrient fluxes spatiotemporal variability to the overall nutrient budget is quantified for Nueces Bay, Texas, U.S.A., across hydroclimatic conditions ranging from drought to normal, to flood. On average, 67% of the variance in water quality is due to temporal differences while 16% is explained by spatial differences. Principal component analysis (PCA) reveals three principal components: freshwater inflow (PC1 28.8%), saline/recirculated SGD and recycled nitrogen (PC2 15.6%), and total SGD and "new" nitrogen (PC3 11.2%). Total SGD porewater fluxes ranged from 29.9-690.3 mmol∙m-2d-1 for ammonium, 0.21-18.7 mmol∙m-2d-1 for nitrite+nitrate, 3.1-51.3 mmol∙m-2d-1 for phosphate, 57.1-719.7 mmol∙m-2d-1 for silicate, and 95.9-36,838.5 mmol∙m-2d-1 for dissolved organic carbon. Total and saline/recirculated SGD fluxes were on average 150-26,000 and 5.8-466 times, respectively, greater than surface runoff fluxes across all seasons. Nitrogen (N) enrichment in porewater occurs near the agricultural fields because of soil N flushing and percolation to groundwater, which facilitates N-rich groundwater fluxes. There were substantial "new" N inputs from terrestrial groundwater following precipitation while saline/recirculated SGD of recycled N accounts for only <4% of total SGD inputs. The "new" N inputs occur in the river and river mouth during flooding, and near the north shore where topography and hydraulic gradients are steeper during drought. Thus, while significant inputs of N may be associated with atmospheric deposition, or remineralization in the porewater, groundwater is the highest contributor to the nutrient budget in Nueces Bay. This result implies that nutrient management strategies should focus on land-use practices to reduce N contamination of shallow groundwater and subsequent contamination of estuaries.

4.
Sci Total Environ ; 630: 1343-1359, 2018 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29554754

ABSTRACT

We conducted a comprehensive analysis of a variety of geochemical data including total alkalinity (TA), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), major ions, stable isotopes, and submarine groundwater discharge, to understand biogeochemical and hydrologic processes driving the seasonal to annual estuarine buffering capacity in Nueces Bay, Texas. These measurements, together with statistical analysis and geochemical modeling, show large variability of freshwater influence. TA consumption, common to spring seasons, was mainly driven by CaCO3 precipitation and, to some extent, by aerobic respiration. TA production occurred in some parts of the bay during summer, fall and winter, likely driven by denitrification. CaCO3 dissolution is stimulated by input of undersaturated river waters following significant flooding events. Since consumption and production of TA was not necessarily associated with different salinity zones, SGD, identified to be significant year-round, likely offsets the effects of salinity changes. Net DIC and TA fluxes exceeded dissolved organic carbon flux by an order of magnitude, except for winter 2014 when it was in the same order of magnitude. In addition to generally larger SGD rates when compared to other studies, production of TA (DIC and DOC) in the bottom sediments, as observed in this study, leads to larger fluxes, especially for the driest season (winter 2014), in the mid-bay area (6.27·106µMm-2d-1). Consistently larger inputs occur along the shoreline stations (6.14·106µMm-2d-1) following the flood recession, when compared to mid-bay (1.26·106µMm-2d-1) and are associated with lower SGD following the summer 2015 flooding. This study demonstrates that the carbonate chemistry of estuaries in semiarid areas is affected by non-conservative processes because of seasonal variability of hydroclimatic conditions.

5.
Sci Total Environ ; 572: 595-607, 2016 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27620959

ABSTRACT

There is a lack of understanding and methods for assessing the effects of anthropogenic disruptions, (i.e. river fragmentation due to dam construction) on the extent and degree of groundwater-surface water interaction and geochemical processes affecting the quality of water in semi-arid, coastal catchments. This study applied a novel combination of electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and elemental and isotope geochemistry in a coastal river disturbed by extended drought and periodic flooding due to the operation of multiple dams. Geochemical analyses show that the saltwater barrier causes an increase in salinity in surface water in the downstream river as a result of limited freshwater inflows, strong evaporation effects on shallow groundwater and mostly stagnant river water, and is not due to saltwater intrusion by tidal flooding. Discharge from bank storage is dominant (~84%) in the downstream fragment and its contribution could increase salinity levels within the hyporheic zone and surface water. When surface water levels go up due to upstream freshwater releases the river temporarily displaces high salinity water trapped in the hyporheic zone to the underlying aquifer. Geochemical modeling shows a higher contribution of distant and deeper groundwater (~40%) in the upstream river and lower discharge from bank storage (~13%) through the hyporheic zone. Recharge from bank storage is a source of high salt to both upstream and downstream portions of the river but its contribution is higher below the dam. Continuous ERT imaging of the river bed complements geochemistry findings and indicate that while lithologically similar, downstream of the dam, the shallow aquifer is affected by salinization while fresher water saturates the aquifer in the upstream fragment. The relative contribution of flows (i.e. surface water releases or groundwater discharge) as related to the river fragmentation control changes of streamwater chemistry and likely impact the interpretation of seasonal trends.


Subject(s)
Groundwater/chemistry , Hydrology/methods , Rivers , Water Quality , Calcium Carbonate/chemistry , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Chlorides/analysis , Climate , Electric Conductivity , Groundwater/analysis , Oxygen Isotopes/analysis , Power Plants , Radon/analysis , Sulfates/analysis , Texas , Tomography/methods
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