Paleo-Indicators and Water Quality Change in the Charlotte Harbor Estuary (Florida)

We reconstructed water quality changes for 1800 to 2000 in Charlotte Harbor (Florida), a shallow subtropical estuary, by using a suite of biological and geochemical proxies in dated sediments collected in the region of a present day, midsummer hypoxic zone. The declining freshwater loading into the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Limnology and oceanography 2006-01, Vol.51 (1), p.518-533
Hauptverfasser: Turner, R. E., Rabalais, N. N., Fry, B., N. Atilla, C. S. Milan, Lee, J. M., C. Normandeau, T. A. Oswald, E. M. Swenson, Tomasko, D. A.
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container_end_page 533
container_issue 1
container_start_page 518
container_title Limnology and oceanography
container_volume 51
creator Turner, R. E.
Rabalais, N. N.
Fry, B.
N. Atilla
C. S. Milan
Lee, J. M.
C. Normandeau
T. A. Oswald
E. M. Swenson
Tomasko, D. A.
description We reconstructed water quality changes for 1800 to 2000 in Charlotte Harbor (Florida), a shallow subtropical estuary, by using a suite of biological and geochemical proxies in dated sediments collected in the region of a present day, midsummer hypoxic zone. The declining freshwater loading into the estuary from 1931 to the 1980s is not the probable causal agent encouraging the appearance or expansion of a hypoxia zone (measuring up to$90 km^2$in summer). Rather, the reconstructed trends in nitrogen loading indicate increased phytoplankton production has likely caused a decline in bottom water oxygen concentrations. Sedimentary biogenic silica (BSi), carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus concentrations increased concurrently with known or inferred changes in nutrient loadings. There were direct relationships between phytoplankton pigments and BSi, heavier δ34S with increased carbon loading, and sequestration of P, Al, and Fe as carbon loading increased. The results from the sediment analyses and the results from mixing models using C : N ratios and δ13C suggest an estuarine system that is responsive to increased carbon loading from the nitrogen-limited phytoplankton community and whose sediments are becoming increasingly anoxic as a result. The present nitrogen loading is about three times above that prior to the 1800s, suggesting that without management intervention the anticipated doubling of the watershed's population from 1990 to 2020 will greatly increase the nitrogen loading to this estuary and will lead to much higher amounts of phytoplankton biomass and accumulation and exacerbate hypoxic conditions.
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source Wiley Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Wiley Online Library (Open Access Collection); Alma/SFX Local Collection; JSTOR
subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Brackish
Brackish water ecosystems
Carbon
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Estuaries
Exact sciences and technology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Harbors
Isotope geochemistry
Isotope geochemistry. Geochronology
Marine and continental quaternary
Nitrogen
Oxygen
Phytoplankton
Pigments
Sediments
Surface water
Surficial geology
Synecology
Water quality
title Paleo-Indicators and Water Quality Change in the Charlotte Harbor Estuary (Florida)
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