Title of article :
Hydrometeorological controls on water level in a vegetated Chesapeake Bay tidal freshwater delta
Author/Authors :
Gregory B. Pasternack، نويسنده , , Linda A. Hinnov، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Wind vectors, watershed discharge, and subestuarine water levels were monitored in a vegetated delta at the head of the Bush
River, an upper Chesapeake Bay tributary in Maryland, during an El Nin˜ o/La Nin˜ a cycle 1995–1996 to investigate hydrometeorological
processes that affect the tidal freshwater ecosystem located there. Time series of these processes were analyzed in
both the time and frequency domains using such methods as flood frequency analysis, harmonic analysis, averaged and evolutionary
power spectral analysis, and coherency spectral analysis. Wind speed variations with periods of 3–4 and 7 days were found to have
both high spectral power and high statistical significance. The frequencies of these variations fluctuated over weeks to months and
the amplitudes modulated seasonally, but the variations persisted interannually. Significantly greater subtidal wind speed variations
in the prinicipal wind direction occurred during the cold and stormy La Nin˜ a winter of 1996 relative to the warm and dry El Nin˜ o
winter of 1995. Data from five hurricanes occurring in the region during the study provided high-resolution snapshots of the
mechanisms revealed by the time series analyses. Water level quickly responded to south–north directed wind speed fluctuations
during the aperiodic hurricanes, illustrating the strong coupling between wind and water levels in this system. The magnitude of the
response was large enough to determine the extent and duration of flooding over tens of hectares in important intertidal marsh
habitats. Subtidal water level variations were greater during the La Nin˜ a period. During El Nin˜ o conditions, the east–west wind
component played a larger role than during the La Nin˜ a period. Variations in local watershed discharge as well as Susquehanna
River outflow had no measurable impact on water levels in the upper reaches of the Bush River tributary during the study.
Keywords :
estuarine circulation , tidal freshwater wetlands , wind drift currents , tidal currents , Chesapeake Bay
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science