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projects > determination of nutrient loads to east coast canals > abstract


Methodology for the Determination of Nutrient Loads to East Coast Canals

Project Chief: Arthur C. Lietz

Of major concern in many coastal areas around the Nation is the ecological health of bays and estuaries. A common problem in many of these areas is increased nutrient loads as a result of agricultural, commercial, industrial, and urban processes. Biscayne Bay, a shallow subtropical estuary, has average depths of about 2 to 3 meters along the southeastern coast of Florida. The Biscayne Bay ecosystem provides an aquatic environment that is a habitat to a diverse array of plant and animal communities. Nutrients are essential compounds for the growth and maintenance of all organisms and especially for the productivity of aquatic environments. Nitrogen and phosphorus compounds are especially important to seagrass, macroalgae, and phytoplankton. However, heavy nutrient loads to bays and estuaries can result in conditions conducive to eutrophication and the attendant problems of algal blooms and high phytoplankton productivity. Additionally, reduced light penetration in the water column because of phytoplankton blooms can adversely affect seagrasses, which many commercial and sport fish rely on for their habitat. Providing reliable estimates of nonpoint source nutrient loads to Biscayne Bay is important to the development of nutrient budgets as well as input to eutrophication models. Understanding the effects of these nutrient loads is a necessary initial step in planning restoration of the ecological health of Biscayne Bay.

Nutrient data have been collected from the east coast canals for many years by the Dade County Department of Environmental Resources Management. Much of the data, which have been collected, are from point samples collected about 1 meter below the surface from the centroid of flow. The degree to which these samples adequately represent nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations within the water column of the canals of south Florida is presently unknown and limits confidence in loading estimates. Furthermore, the relation between discharge and nutrient concentration that occurs in natural uncontrolled streams in other parts of the Nation may not apply to the artificially controlled canals of south Florida. Both of these issues need to be addressed to develop nutrient budgets and to plan effective restoration strategy now and in the future.

Nutrient data will be collected at 15 coastal control structures in Dade County. A total of 20 samples sets (point and depth integrated) will be collected at each structure during the wet season. Sampling began at 5 sites in May 1996 and at 10 sites in October 1996. Constituents being collected include ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, orthophosphate, and total phosphorus.


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U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Center for Coastal Geology
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Last updated: 11 October, 2002 @ 09:29 PM (KP)