4.5 Article

Great South Bay After Sandy: Changes in Circulation and Flushing due to New Inlet

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages 2172-2190

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-018-0423-6

Keywords

Multi-inlet lagoon; Breach; Circulation; Flushing time; FVCOM

Funding

  1. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation [AM08782 OGL MOU]
  2. National Science Foundation [ACI-1548562]
  3. U.S. National Park Service [P13AC00681]

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The coastal ocean model FVCOM is applied to quantify the changes in circulation, flushing, and exposure time in Great South Bay, New York, after Superstorm Sandy breached the barrier island in 2012. Since then, the lagoon system is connected to the Atlantic via five instead of four inlets. The model simulations are run on two high-resolution unstructured grids, one for the pre-breach configuration, one including the new inlet, with tidal-only forcing, and summer and winter forcing conditions. Despite its small cross-sectional size, the breach has a relatively large net inflow that leads to a strengthening of the along-bay through-flow in Great South Bay (GSB); the tidally driven volume transport in central GSB quadrupled. The seasonal forcing scenarios show that the southwesterly sea breeze in summer slowsdown the tidally driven flow, while the forcing conditions in winter are highly variable, and the circulation is dependent on wind direction and offshore sea level. Changes in flushing and exposure time associated with the modified transport patterns are evaluated using a Eulerian passive tracer technique. Results show that the new inlet produced a significant decrease in flushing time (approximately 35% reduction under summer wind conditions and 20% reduction under winter wind conditions). Maps of exposure time reflect the localchanges in circulation and flushing.

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