Title of article :
Variation in sediment stability and relation to indicators of microbial abundance in the Okura Estuary, New Zealand
Author/Authors :
S. D. Lelieveld، نويسنده , , C. A. Pilditch، نويسنده , , M. O. Green، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Secretions of mucus by benthic microbes potentially bind estuarine intertidal sediment, thus affecting stability by raising the erosion
threshold. Existing models for predicting onset of erosion—such as the Shields diagram—have been built from laboratory studies
of abiotic sediments, hence their accuracy when applied to natural sediment may be limited. In this study, variability in critical
shear velocity (u*crit) of natural intertidal sediments is correlated with indicators of microbial abundance, and based on those correlations
we develop a predictor for the erosion threshold of natural sediments. Sediment cores, collected over 9 months from four
sites of contrasting grain size (77–185 lm) in the Okura Estuary (Auckland, New Zealand), were eroded in a laboratory flume to
determine u*crit. Critical shear velocity for initiation of motion ranged from a minimum of 0.52 cm s 1 at the coarse-grained site
to a maximum of 1.45 cm s 1 at the fine-grained site, values of which are up to three times those measured for equivalent abiotic
sediment. The increase in u*crit with decreasing grain size was correlated with indicators of microalgal biomass (pigment) and mucilage
content (carbohydrate) in the surface 2mm of sediment. Abiotic measures of hcrit (non-dimensional u*crit) were adjusted via
a stability factor, which was expressed as a function of sediment pheopigment content to estimate the erosion threshold in natural
sediments in a better way. This method takes into account the temporal variations in sediment stability that occur irrespective of
grain size.
Keywords :
Tidal flats , stabilization , Polysaccharides , PIGMENTS , Microbial biomass , New Zealand , sediment entrainment , temporal variations
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science