Title of article :
The impact of shrimp trawling and associated sediment resuspension in mud dominated, shallow estuaries
Author/Authors :
Timothy M. Dellapenna، نويسنده , , Mead A. Allison، نويسنده , , Gary A. Gill، نويسنده , , Ronald D. Lehman، نويسنده , , Kent W. Warnken، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
To address the relative importance of shrimp trawling on seabed resuspension and bottom characteristics in shallow estuaries, a series of
disturbance and monitoring experiments were conducted at a bay bottom mud site (2.5 m depth) in Galveston Bay, Texas in July 1998 and
May 1999. Based on pre- and post-trawl sediment profiles of 7Be; pore water dissolved oxygen and sulfide concentration; and bulk sediment
properties, it was estimated that the trawl rig, including the net, trawl doors, and ‘‘tickler chain,’’ excavate the seabed to a maximum depth
of approximately 1.5 cm, with most areas displaying considerably less disturbance. Water column profile data in the turbid plume left by the
trawl in these underconsolidated muds (85e90% porosity; <0.25 kPa undrained shear strength) demonstrate that suspended sediment inventories
of up to 85e90 mg/cm2 are produced immediately behind the trawl net; an order of magnitude higher than pre-trawl inventories and comparable
to those observed during a 9e10 m/s wind event at the study site. Plume settling and dispersion caused suspended sediment inventories to return
to pre-trawl values about 14 min after trawl passage in two separate experiments, indicating particles re-settle primarily as flocs before they can
be widely dispersed by local currents. As a result of the passage of the trawl rig across the seabed, shear strength of the sediment surface showed
no significant increase, suggesting that bed armoring is not taking place and the trawled areas will not show an increase in critical shear stress.
Keywords :
sediments , Sediment resuspension , seabed mixing , suspended sediment , Galveston Bay , trinity Bay , Shrimp trawling
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science