Using sound pressure to estimate reaeration in streams

The reaeration coefficient (k) is an essential and sensitive component of the equations used to calculate whole-stream metabolism (WSM) for a stream reach by the open-channel method. However, the empirical methods used to estimate k (e.g., by propane or sulfur hexafluoride evasion rates) are time co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the North American Benthological Society 2007-03, Vol.26 (1), p.28-37
Hauptverfasser: Morse, Nathaniel, Bowden, William Breck, Hackman, Alexander, Pruden, Celia, Steiner, Erin, Berger, Elliott
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container_end_page 37
container_issue 1
container_start_page 28
container_title Journal of the North American Benthological Society
container_volume 26
creator Morse, Nathaniel
Bowden, William Breck
Hackman, Alexander
Pruden, Celia
Steiner, Erin
Berger, Elliott
description The reaeration coefficient (k) is an essential and sensitive component of the equations used to calculate whole-stream metabolism (WSM) for a stream reach by the open-channel method. However, the empirical methods used to estimate k (e.g., by propane or sulfur hexafluoride evasion rates) are time consuming and costly. We reasoned that the reaeration rate (the product of k and the dissolved O sub(2) deficit or surplus) and sound level (noise) are related to turbulence in a stream and, thus, sound level should be related to reaeration. We used a simple and inexpensive sound level meter to measure sound levels at a fixed height (30 cm) above key geomorphic features (e.g., pools, riffles, cascades) in several streams in Alaska and Vermont. We calculated a feature-weighted average sound pressure for selected stream reaches based on the proportion of these geomorphic features within each reach. We calculated k in the Alaskan stream reaches based on propane evasion rates and found a strong linear relationship to the feature-weighted average sound pressure (n = 11, r super(2) = 0.94, p < 0.001). We concluded that the sound pressure method, which requires 0.5 h to complete and relies on inexpensive instrumentation, provides estimates of k that are comparable to estimates from the more resource-intensive volatile gas-evasion method. In the Vermont stream reaches, we were able to create a sound pressure-stage rating curve, similar to a hydrologic rating curve. Combining the k-sound pressure relationship with the sound pressure-stage rating curve holds promise as a way to estimate reaeration continuously, at modest cost and effort, and on a time scale similar to that on which dissolved O sub(2), temperature, and light values are recorded to calculate WSM.
doi_str_mv 10.1899/0887-3593(2007)26[28:USPTER]2.0.CO;2
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