Author/Authors :
L.R. Gardner، نويسنده , , B. Kjerfve، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Beginning June of 1993 suites of 13 water samples have been collected at Oyster Landing, North Inlet (SC), every 20 days covering two
consecutive tidal cycles at 2.07 h intervals. In order to ascertain whether this large (and still growing) water chemistry data set can be used
to determine tidal fluxes of nutrients and sediments, we coupled measured concentrations to estimates of instantaneous tidal discharge based
on a basin water storage curve and hindcast tides. The mean advective fluxes of all constituents, including salt, showed statistically significant
exports. This result, however, is largely due to an ebb bias in the sampling protocol, which resulted in 52% of the samples being collected on ebb
tide versus a theoretical percentage of 48%. When this bias was corrected by reducing the mean discharge ( 610 l s 1) to a value ( 125 l s 1)
that produced a balance between the mean advective and dispersive salt fluxes, the advective fluxes of the other constituents were reduced to
values that are not significantly different from zero. In addition to a statistically significant dispersive influx of salt, significant dispersive exports
were found for DON, NH4, DOP, PO4 and DOC. All particulate constituents (PN, PP, ISS and OSS) yielded dispersive fluxes that were not
significantly different from zero. Annual material budgets for the Oyster Landing basin based on the dispersive fluxes of all constituents (except
salt) are generally similar in magnitude and direction to those measured by [Dame, R.F., Spurrier, J.D., Williams, T.M., Kjerfve, B., Zingmark,
R.G., Wolaver, T.G., Chrzanowski, T.H., McKeller, H.N., Vernberg, F.J., 1991. Annual material processing by a salt marsh-estuarine basin in
South Carolina, USA. Marine Ecology Progress Series 72, 153e166.] in the nearby and ecologically similar Bly Creek basin, indicating that
the dispersive fluxes determined in this study are realistic. We offer suggestions for improving the reliability and usefulness of future Oyster
Landing water quality data.
Keywords :
salt marshes , tidal fluxes , nutrients , outwelling