Title of article :
Tidally driven pore water exchange within offshore intertidal sandbanks: Part II numerical simulations
Author/Authors :
B. Gibbes، نويسنده , , C. Robinson، نويسنده , , L. Li، نويسنده , , D. Lockington، نويسنده , , H. Li، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Field measurements presented by [Gibbes, B., Robinson, C., Li, L., Lockington, D.A., Carey, H., 2008. Tidally
driven pore water exchange within offshore intertidal sandbanks: Part I Field measurements. Estuarine,
Coastal and Shelf Science 79, pp. 121–132.] revealed a tidally driven pore water flow system within an
offshore intertidal sandbank in Moreton Bay, Australia. The field data suggested that this flow system
might be capable of delivering nutrients, and in particular bio-available iron, across the sediment–water
interface. Bio-available iron has been implicated as a key nutrient in the growth of the toxic marine
cyanobacteria Lyngbya majuscula and therefore this pore water exchange process is of interest at sites
where L. majuscula blooms have been observed. In this study two-dimensional numerical simulations
were used in conjunction with hydraulic data from field measurements to further investigate the tidally
induced pore water flow patterns. Simulation results generally showed good agreement with the field
data and revealed a more complex residual pore water flow system in the sandbank than shown by the
field data. The flow system, strongly influenced by the geometry of the sandbank, was characterized by
two circulation cells which resulted in pore water discharge at the bank edge and also to a permanently
ponded area within the sandbank interior. Simulated discharge volumes in these two zones were in the
order of 0.813 m3 and 0.143 m3 per meter width (along shore) of sandbank per tidal cycle at the bank
edge and sandbank interior respectively. Transit times of pore water circulating through these cells were
found to range from z 17 days to> 60 years with an average time of 780 days. The results suggest that
the tidally driven flow systems might provide a mechanism for transport of bio-available iron across the
sediment–water interface. This flow could constitute a previously unrecognized source of bio-available
iron for L. majuscula blooms in the Bay.
Keywords :
intertidal systempore water exchangenumerical modeloffshore sandbankLyngbya majusculaMoreton Bay
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science