Overview
Estuarine and Coastal
Processes
- 2008-2010 Projects
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- 2004-2006 Projects
- 2002-2004 Projects
- 2000-2002 Projects
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- 1996-1998 Projects
- 1994-1996 Projects »
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Estuarine and Coastal Processes
1994-1996 Projects
Ecologically-Based Environmental Management
Brian L. Howes and Dale D. Goehringer, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
This Sea Grant-supported study is designed to encompass all of the
major ecological processes dominating the water quality and productivity
of a coastal system, Nantucket Harbor: nutrient conditions, high
frequency oxygen monitoring, groundwater inputs, sediment nutrient
regeneration, circulation, submerged macrophyte production, and
fish, shellfish and infaunal populations. By choosing Nantucket
Harbor as the study site--a healthy system which has only recently
begun to show signs of nutrient-related stress in some of its associated,
smaller water bodies--researchers will have a basis for comparison
to the many studies that look at already eutrophied waters. Also,
this study represents a new approach to coastal water quality management
in that it seeks to manage coastal waters at the ecosystem level,
and is designed to represent a model upon which management plans
for other coastal communities can be based.
Boundary Mixing in Massachusetts Bay
Wayne R. (Rocky) Geyer and James R. Ledwell, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
As a follow-up to a 19921994 Sea Grant-supported study, investigators
will:
- determine the rate of vertical mixing across the thermocline
in a boundary region of Massachusetts Bay through a controlled
dye release;
- determine mechanisms responsible for the mixing; and
- determine the contribution of boundary mixing to the overall
vertical exchange rate in the bay.
Completion of these objectives will provide better
understanding of nutrient exchanges and enable investigators to
quantify the transport of natural and anthropogenic materials across
the nearshore zone. Also, this study will add to the understanding
of how the controversial Boston Harbor sewage outfall, now under
construction, will impact Massachusetts Bay.
Benthic Processing of Sewage Additions:
Controls of Denitrification in High Energy Environments
Anne E. Giblin and Charles S. Hopkinson, Jr., Ecosystems Center,
Marine Biological Laboratory
Another continuing project taking place in Massachusetts Bay related
to the multi-million dollar Boston Harbor sewage outfall project,
this study investigates the importance of benthic processing of
sewage inputs into coastal waters. By looking at and comparing benthic
environments with fine grained and coarse grained sediments--the
latter considered a higher energy environment due to more intense
mixing and flushing--the project will yield information such as
whether different treatment options are more appropriate in some
sedimentary environments than others. These results will be of use
to coastal communities involved in developing nutrient loading bylaws.
In addition, the project will provide information on the basic controls
of benthic nutrient regeneration that are essential for further
development of a linked hydrodynamic and water quality model for
Massachusetts Bay.
Tidal Flat Deposition: Processes and Rheology
David G. Aubrey, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Pollutants are known to accumulate with fine sediments along the
coastal zone, within estuaries, in lagoons and along the open coast.
The fate of some of these pollutants follows the fate of these fine
sediments. Unfortunately, our present ability to predict transport
of fine sediments, and therefore certain pollutants, is unsatisfactory.
To remedy this problem, researchers will develop a consistent theoretical
methodology to examine fine sediment deposition in tidal flats,
areas that commonly surround heavily polluted harbors. The approach
is to combine divergent methodologies of hydrodynamic modeling (tidal
propagation and nonlinear interaction) with improved models of rheology
and accurate field observations.
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