Title of article
Spatial patterning of water quality in Biscayne Bay, Florida as a function of land use and water management
Author/Authors
Valentina G. Caccia، نويسنده , , Joseph N. Boyer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
14
From page
1416
To page
1429
Abstract
An objective classification analysis was performed on a water quality data set from 25 sites collected monthly during 1994–2003. The water quality parameters measured included: TN, TON, DIN, , TP, SRP, TN:TP ratio, TOC, DO, CHL A, turbidity, salinity and temperature. Based on this spatial analysis, Biscayne Bay was divided into five zones having similar water quality characteristics. A robust nutrient gradient, driven mostly by dissolved inorganic nitrogen, from alongshore to offshore in the main Bay, was a large determinant in the spatial clustering. Two of these zones (Alongshore and Inshore) were heavily influenced by freshwater input from four canals which drain the South Dade agricultural area, Black Point Landfill, and sewage treatment plant. The North Bay zone, with high turbidity, phytoplankton biomass, total phosphorus, and low DO, was affected by runoff from five canals, the Munisport Landfill, and the urban landscape. The South Bay zone, an embayment surrounded by mangrove wetlands with little urban development, was high in dissolved organic constituents but low in inorganic nutrients. The Main Bay was the area most influenced by water exchange with the Atlantic Ocean and showed the lowest nutrient concentrations. The water quality in Biscayne Bay is therefore highly dependent of the land use and influence from the watershed.
Keywords
water quality , nutrients , Estuary , Biscayne Bay , seasonal variation
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Record number
1295566
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