Overview
Estuarine and Coastal
Processes
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Estuarine and Coastal Processes
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Snapshot
WHOI Sea Grant's investment in estuarine and coastal processes has
resulted in better understanding of the physical, chemical, geological,
and biological processes of coastal habitats. This information has
been applied to critical management decisions in the coastal zone
including water quality issues, shoreline erosion and storm damage,
and food web dynamics.
Background
Estuarine and coastal processes, whether physical, chemical, geological
or biological, are especially complex due in large part to the susceptibility
of estuarine and coastal waters to forcing by adjacent marine, terrestrial,
and meteorological systems. At the same time it is those waters
that lie in the immediate vicinity of the coast -- coastal ponds,
estuaries, and embayments -- that are most impacted by society's
commercial, recreational, and residential activities. In southeastern
Massachusetts recent development in coastal communities, especially
on Cape Cod and the Islands, was among the highest rate of increase
within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. For example, the population
of Barnstable County (Cape Cod) increased by 26 percent from the
period 1980 to 1990, compared with a state-wide increase of only
5 percent during the same decade. Other threats to coastal communities
include sea-level rise, conflicts between private ownership of the
coast and public access, and recreational demands of the increasing
coastal population (boating, fishing, shellfishing, beach-going).
Research supported within this theme is often multidisciplinary
and directly interfaces with the management community that must
make regulatory decisions on the proper stewardship of coastal ecosystems.
Objectives
WHOI Sea Grant's theme in Estuarine and Coastal Processes is consistent
with the needs for better information on coastal habitats and societal
pressures on the coastal zone. Within the framework of the NOAA
Sea Grant Strategic Plan, 1995-2005, these efforts are focused on
three major portfolios: Economic Leadership, Coastal Ecosystem Health
and Public Safety, and Education and Human Resources. Within these
portfolios there are major strategic initiatives in advanced technology
for commercial products, seafood production, coastal economic development,
coastal ecosystem processes, public safety, technology transfer,
and public outreach.
To fulfill our objectives and mandate within the strategic plan,
WHOI Sea Grant's theme in Estuarine and Coastal Processes has focused
on:
- Improvement of our understanding of the processes that control
water quality and sediment quality in coastal habitats;
- Characterization of sediment transport processes, especially
in understanding the balance between erosion and deposition in
coastal habitats;
- Implementation of better management policies for protection
of shoreline habitats.
Sea Grant Involvement
Since 1990 the WHOI Sea Grant Program has played a major role in
supporting multidisciplinary studies directed at understanding the
potential effects of an offshore ocean outfall from the City of
Boston, Massachusetts. In 1985 the Massachusetts Water Resources
Authority (MWRA) was created to modernize water and sewer services
in the metropolitan Boston area and to spearhead the cleanup of
the harbor. Part of the cleanup plan is to discharge effluent through
a 9.5-mile, 24-foot diameter outfall tunnel that will discharge
effluents to Massachusetts Bay. When the offshore outfall was initially
proposed, many questions were raised by local communities on the
potential impacts of effluent discharge in the relatively pristine
waters of outer Massachusetts Bay and Cape Cod Bay. To address these
concerns, WHOI Sea Grant supported several investigations, beginning
in 1992 and continuing until the present, directed at better understanding
the potential effects that discharges from the new outfall may have
on Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays. These include studies of water
circulation, nutrient enrichment, food web dynamics, and harmful
algal blooms. WHOI Sea Grant will continue to support investigations
on fundamental processes in the offshore habitats of Massachusetts
and Cape Cod Bays when the outfall becomes operational in order
to identify the natural variability in ecosystem parameters and
help explain the trigger points of post-outfall effects.
Other studies of coastal processes supported by
the WHOI Sea Grant Program have led to the development of new tools
for assessing water quality conditions, new models that help explain
the dynamics of barrier beaches and coastal lagoons, and a better
understanding of historical patterns in sea level rise. Our coastal
hazards outreach effort is directed at integrating a scientific
understanding of the processes that maintain coastal landforms with
the management concerns arising from the effects of these processes
on coastal towns.
Producing Significant Results
Research Support
Controls on Nitrogen Fluxes from Estuarine Sediments: The Importance
of Salinity, Anne E. Giblin and Charles S. Hopkinson, Marine Biological
Laboratory Ecosystems Center (R/M-41)
Demographic Analysis of the Northern Right Whale,
Hal Caswell, WHOI Biology Department (R/M-45)
Groundwater Discharge of Nutrients into Coastal
Ponds as Traced by Radium Isotopes, Matthew A. Charette and Ken
O. Buesseler, WHOI Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Department
(R/M-46)
Development of a Carbon Isotopic Method for Quantifying
Groundwater Inputs to Estuaries, Daniel C. McCorkle, WHOI Geology
and Geophysics Department (R/M-47)
Post-Outfall Studies of Toxic Alexandrium Populations
in Massachusetts Bay, Donald M. Anderson and Bruce A. Keafer, WHOI
Biology Department (R/B-158)
The Recycling of Anthropogenic Metals in Massachusetts
Bay Sediments: Assessing the Impact of the New Outfall, Roger Francois,
Raja Ganeshram, and William R. Martin, WHOI Marine Chemistry and
Geochemistry Department (R/B-160)
Dynamics of the Toxic Dinoflagellate Alexandrium
in the Gulf of Maine: Source Populations and Downstream Impacts,
Donald M. Anderson, WHOI Biology Department, and Jefferson T. Turner,
University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth Biology Department (R/B-140)
Impacts of Accelerated Sea Level Rise in Storm Induced
Sedimentation on Southern New England Coastal Wetlands, Thompson
Webb III and Jeffrey P. Donnelly, Brown University, Department of
Geological Sciences (R/G-25)
Multiple Tidal Inlet Stability, David G. Aubrey,
WHOI Geology and Geophysics Department (R/G-27)
Assessing the Potential for Increased Paralytic
Shellfish Poisoning in Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays Due to the
Outfall Effluents, Donald M. Anderson, WHOI Biology Department,
and Andrew R. Solow, WHOI Marine Policy Center (R/B-149)
Quantifying Flushing Rates of Estuaries, Wayne R.
Geyer and James R. Ledwell, WHOI Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering
Department (R/O-30)
Ecosystem Level Measurements of Denitrification
in Estuaries, Anne E. Giblin and Charles S. Hopkinson, Marine Biological
Laboratory Ecosystems Center (R/M-37)
A Stable Isotopic Approach for Early Detection of
Wastewater Nitrogen in Estuarine Food Webs, Ivan Valiela, Boston
University Marine Program (R/M-38)
Tidal Flat Deposition: Processes and Rheology, David
G. Aubrey, WHOI Geology and Geophysics Department (R/G-21)
Ecologically Based Environmental Management, Brian
L. Howes and Dale D. Goehringer, WHOI Biology Department (R/M-30)
Boundary Mixing in Massachusetts Bay, Wayne R. Geyer
and James R. Ledwell, WHOI Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering
Department (R/O-24)
Benthic Processing of Sewage Additions: Controls
of Denitrification in High Energy Environments, Anne E. Giblin and
Charles S. Hopkinson, Marine Biological Laboratory Ecosystems Center
(R/P-56)
Toxic Red Tides in Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays,
Donald M. Anderson, WHOI Biology Department (R/B-112)
Economic Impacts of Harmful Algal Blooms, Yoshi
Kaoru, WHOI Marine Policy Center, and Donald M. Anderson, WHOI Biology
Department (R/S-24)
Benthic Processing of Sewage Additions: Role in
Anoxia and Nitrogen Cycling, Anne E. Giblin and Charles S. Hopkinson,
Marine Biological Laboratory Ecosystems Center (R/P-47)
Vertical Mixing Processes in Massachusetts Bay,
Wayne R. Geyer and James R. Ledwell, WHOI Applied Ocean Physics
and Engineering Department, and Graham S. Giese, WHOI Geology and
Geophysics Department (R/O-17)
The Role of Colloids in Metal Transport in Coastal
Waters, S. Bradley Moran, WHOI Chemistry Department (R/P-46)
Citizen's Monitoring Effort for Falmouth's Coastal
Ponds, Brian Howes and Dale D. Goehringer, WHOI Biology Department
(R/M-26)
Ecologically-Based Environmental Management, Brian
Howes and Dale D. Goehringer, WHOI Biology Department (R/M-30)
Nitrogen Budget for a Eutrophic Salt Pond: Relative
Importance of Benthic Regeneration and Groundwater Inputs, Brian
L. Howes and John M. Teal, WHOI Biology Department (R/P-34)
Formation and Maintenance of Shore-Oblique Sand
Ridges: Hydrodynamics and Sediment Transport, John H. Trowbridge,
WHOI Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering Department, and David
G. Aubrey, WHOI Geology and Geophysics Department (R/O-12)
Coastal Upwelling in Cape Cod Bay, Wayne R. Geyer,
WHOI Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering Department, and Graham
S. Giese, WHOI Geology and Geophysics Department (R/O-14)
Instrumental High Resolution, Long-Term Measurement
of Primary Production and Oxygen Concentration in Eutrophic Coastal
Ponds, Craig D. Taylor and Brian L. Howes, WHOI Biology Department
(R/P-38)
Public Risk Perception and Coastal Flood Insurance,
Yoshi Kaoru, WHOI Marine Policy Center, and Graham S. Giese, WHOI
Geology and Geophysics Department (R/S-25)
An Optimal Risk Sharing Strategy for Marine Oil
Transport, Di Jin and Hauke Kite-Powell, WHOI Marine Policy Center
(R/S-28)
Estimating the Value of Marine Mining for Strategic
Minerals Supply, James M. Broadus, WHOI Marine Policy Center (R/S-20)
Extension Support
WHOI Sea Grant Focal
Points, fact sheets for legislators and coastal decision-makers:
- Cape Cod Coastal Erosion: A Case Study
- Shoreline Change and the Importance of Coastal Erosion
- Beach and Dune Profiles: An Educational Tool for Observing
and Comparing Dynamic Coastal Environments
- The Massachusetts Bay Outfall
WHOI Sea Grant Marine
Extension Bulletins, technical fact sheets for regional industry,
agencies, and professional organizations:
- Perigean Spring Tides (Predicting Potential Disasters: How
Tidal Information May Save you from a Coastal Crisis)
The following workshops:
- Coastal Landform Management in Massachusetts (1997)
The following programs or special events:
- Cape Cod Sustainable Landform Project -- quantification, on
a town-by-town basis, the gains and losses of Cape Cod coastal
landform sustainability resulting from decisions of local resource
management agencies with recommendations on the administrative
policies and procedure that have resulted in these gains and losses.
(1996-present)
- "Coastal Landform Management in Massachusetts" Workshop
(October 1997) and Proceedings
- "All-Cape Coastal Science Seminar Series" (1991-1994)
- Pond Watchers citizens water quality monitoring program (1987-1994)
- Coastal Studies Program for High School Students (1992-1994)
Contributions to the Scientific Community
Research projects supported between 1990-2000 have yield numerous
advances and discoveries within the scientific community. A few
highlights include:
- Sea Grant and municipal funding initiated a citizen's water
quality monitoring program that sampled several coastal embayments
in Falmouth, Massachusetts, to establish a baseline for nutrient
inputs for each embayment. The monitoring program continues to
gather information and provide the town with important information
about the health of these embayments and the impact on these embayments
by natural and human inputs to these systems. A key decision relating
to sewering one of the villages hinged upon the data and analysis
by scientists and community water quality volunteers.
- Several projects related to the ocean outfall for Boston, that
will eventually discharge sewage into Massachusetts Bay, have
yielded important baseline data about the Massachusetts Bay and
Cape Cod Bay systems. For example, Sea Grant supported studies
have gathered data on the ability of the benthic community to
process sewage-derived nutrients, vertical and horizontal mixing
processes in Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays, and relationships
between increased nutrients and incidence of harmful algal blooms
(HABs).
- Investigators have used stable isotopes to study wastewater
nitrogen in estuarine food webs and found that waste water derived
nitrogen is assimilated into various trophic levels.
- Studies of New England salt marshes using radiocarbon dating
of marsh peat and examination of historical records of marsh vegetation
imply a region-wide change in sea level is likely the cause of
recent patterns in flooding regime and corresponding increases
in sea level rise. This transgressive trend is unprecedented in
the recent geologic past. Additionally, investigators concluded
that an increase in sea level should be anticipated in coming
decades.
- An in-depth analysis of status and projections for the northern
right whale, a critically endangered species, is forthcoming.
Investment in Education
Graduate Student Support: 15 students; 54.5 months
Undergraduate Student Support: 2 students; 9.5 months
What it Cost
Research Support (1990-2000):
Sea Grant Funds: $2,663,235
Matching Funds: $1,909,350
Total: $4,572,585
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