4.5 Article

Seasonal Alternation Between Groundwater Discharge and Benthic Coupling as Nutrient Sources in a Shallow Coastal Lagoon

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 925-940

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-013-9739-4

Keywords

Groundwater discharge; Benthic coupling; Temperature; Lagoon; Gulf of Mexico; Nitrogen; Phosphorus

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [OCE-0961994, OCE-0961970]
  2. US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mississippi Alabama Sea Grant Consortium [R/CEH-32]
  3. Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources [DISL-CZM-306-10-1]
  4. University of South Alabama
  5. US Food and Drug Administration's Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory
  6. Directorate For Geosciences
  7. Division Of Ocean Sciences [0962008, 0961970] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is now recognized as an important source of nutrients and freshwater to some coastal environments. We studied a shallow coastal lagoon (Little Lagoon, AL, USA) in the northern Gulf of Mexico that lacks riverine inputs but has been suspected to receive significant SGD. We observed persistent salinity gradients between the east and west ends of the lagoon and the pass connecting it to the Gulf of Mexico. Covariance between salinity in the lagoon and the groundwater tracer Rn-222 indicated that SGD was responsible for the salinity gradients and is the primary source of freshwater to the lagoon. Cluster analysis of 246 biweekly samples based on temperature, salinity, and two proxies of SGD revealed two hydrographic regimes with different drivers for nutrient inputs. In samples characterized by high discharge and low temperatures (generally December-April), total nitrogen (TN) was negatively correlated with salinity, while total phosphorus (TP) was positively correlated with temperature. Total nitrogen in the groundwater was very high (0.36-4.80 mM) while total phosphorus was relatively low (0.3-2.3 mu M), consistent with SGD as the source of TN during the high-discharge periods. In periods with low discharge and higher temperatures (approx. May-November), TN and TP had strong positive correlations with temperature and are inferred to originate from benthic efflux. Seasonal changes in nutrient stoichiometry in the lagoon water column also indicate an alternation between low TN/TP sediments and high TN/TP groundwater as the primary sources of nitrogen in this system.

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