Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge.
Groundwater-surface water interactions drive water quality in both streams and the coastal ocean, where groundwater discharge occurs in streams as baseflow and along the coastline as submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Groundwater contributions to streams and to the coastal ocean were quantified...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224513 |
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doaj-b33967e2878f42f5975ecaae38209d712021-03-03T21:11:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011410e022451310.1371/journal.pone.0224513Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge.Trista McKenzieHenrietta DulaiJennet ChangGroundwater-surface water interactions drive water quality in both streams and the coastal ocean, where groundwater discharge occurs in streams as baseflow and along the coastline as submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Groundwater contributions to streams and to the coastal ocean were quantified in three urban streams in Kāne'ohe Watershed, Hawai'i. We used radon as a groundwater tracer to show that baseflow contributions to streams ranged from 22 to 68% along their reaches leading to the coast of Kāne'ohe Bay. Total SGD was 4,500, 18,000, and 23,000 m3/day for the northwest, central, and southern sectors of the bay, respectively. Total groundwater (stream baseflow + SGD) dissolved nutrient fluxes were significantly greater than those sourced from stream surface runoff. The studied streams exhibited increasing nutrient levels downstream from groundwater inputs with high nutrient concentrations, negatively impacting coastal water quality. SGD dynamics were also assessed during the anomalously high perigean spring tides in 2017, where SGD was four times greater during the perigean spring tide compared to a spring tide and resulted in strong shifts in N:P ratios, suggesting that rising sea level stands may disrupt primary productivity with greater frequency. This study demonstrates the importance of considering baseflow inputs to streams to coastal groundwater budgets and suggests that coastal water quality may be improved through management and reduction of groundwater contaminants.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224513 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Trista McKenzie Henrietta Dulai Jennet Chang |
spellingShingle |
Trista McKenzie Henrietta Dulai Jennet Chang Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Trista McKenzie Henrietta Dulai Jennet Chang |
author_sort |
Trista McKenzie |
title |
Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
title_short |
Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
title_full |
Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
title_fullStr |
Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
title_sort |
parallels between stream and coastal water quality associated with groundwater discharge. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
Groundwater-surface water interactions drive water quality in both streams and the coastal ocean, where groundwater discharge occurs in streams as baseflow and along the coastline as submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Groundwater contributions to streams and to the coastal ocean were quantified in three urban streams in Kāne'ohe Watershed, Hawai'i. We used radon as a groundwater tracer to show that baseflow contributions to streams ranged from 22 to 68% along their reaches leading to the coast of Kāne'ohe Bay. Total SGD was 4,500, 18,000, and 23,000 m3/day for the northwest, central, and southern sectors of the bay, respectively. Total groundwater (stream baseflow + SGD) dissolved nutrient fluxes were significantly greater than those sourced from stream surface runoff. The studied streams exhibited increasing nutrient levels downstream from groundwater inputs with high nutrient concentrations, negatively impacting coastal water quality. SGD dynamics were also assessed during the anomalously high perigean spring tides in 2017, where SGD was four times greater during the perigean spring tide compared to a spring tide and resulted in strong shifts in N:P ratios, suggesting that rising sea level stands may disrupt primary productivity with greater frequency. This study demonstrates the importance of considering baseflow inputs to streams to coastal groundwater budgets and suggests that coastal water quality may be improved through management and reduction of groundwater contaminants. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224513 |
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AT tristamckenzie parallelsbetweenstreamandcoastalwaterqualityassociatedwithgroundwaterdischarge AT henriettadulai parallelsbetweenstreamandcoastalwaterqualityassociatedwithgroundwaterdischarge AT jennetchang parallelsbetweenstreamandcoastalwaterqualityassociatedwithgroundwaterdischarge |
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