Authors
Isaac R Santos, William C Burnett, Thorsten Dittmar, I GNA Suryaputra, Jeffrey Chanton
Publication date
2009/3/1
Journal
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Volume
73
Issue
5
Pages
1325-1339
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
We hypothesize that nutrient cycling in a Gulf of Mexico subterranean estuary (STE) is fueled by oxygen and labile organic matter supplied by tidal pumping of seawater into the coastal aquifer. We estimate nutrient production rates using the standard estuarine model and a non-steady-state box model, separate nutrient fluxes associated with fresh and saline submarine groundwater discharge (SGD), and estimate offshore fluxes from radium isotope distributions. The results indicate a large variability in nutrient concentrations over tidal and seasonal time scales. At high tide, nutrient concentrations in shallow beach groundwater were low as a result of dilution caused by seawater recirculation. During ebb tide, the concentrations increased until they reached a maximum just before the next high tide. The dominant form of nitrogen was dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) in freshwater, nitrate in brackish waters, and …
Total citations
2009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024571320142320162439242825221718
Scholar articles