Submarine Groundwater Discharge and its Influence on Primary Production in Japanese Coasts: Case Study in Obama Bay

Author(s):  
Hisami Honda ◽  
Ryo Sugimoto ◽  
Shiho Kobayashi
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Xuejing Wang ◽  
Hailong Li

<p>The water age in coastal waters can be estimated by a simplified formula defined by activity ratio of radium isotopes when neglecting the effects of four factors including recirculated seawater (RSGD), open sea water end-member, sediments and rivers. Although this formula has been widely used, sometimes it is applied without checking the assumptions of neglecting the effects of the above-mentioned four factors. Here an attempt is made to give a generalized formula for estimating water age explicitly incorporating all the above-mentioned effects. The formula is then applied in Daya Bay, China by comprehensively using all the radium quartet (<sup>223,224,226,228</sup>Ra) data to assess the water age and submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Data analyses indicate that the factors such as RSGD, open sea water end-member, sediments and rivers should be included in the general radium model when there are various radium sources and their contributions are unknown. It is found that in Daya Bay, neglecting the effects of RSGD underestimates the water age by 25.5-45.7% and neglecting the effects of open sea water end-member overestimates the water age by 120-130%. The SGD-derived fluxes of nutrients and trace elements are significantly higher than those from local rivers. SGD can support approximately 63-70% of the total primary production. Overall, this study emphasizes again the importance of the general radium model and enhances accuracy in estimating water age and SGD. Our results also reveal that SGD significantly influences coastal primary production in Daya Bay and other similar aquatic ecosystems.</p>


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 3029
Author(s):  
Melissa A. Knapp ◽  
Naomi Geeraert ◽  
Kiho Kim ◽  
Karen L. Knee

Seagrass meadows and coral reefs along the coast of Saipan, a US commonwealth in the Northern Pacific, have been declining since the 1940s, possibly due to nutrient loading. This study investigated whether submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) contributes to nutrient loading and supports primary production on Saipan’s coast. SGD can be an important source of freshwater, nutrients, and other pollutants to coastal waters, especially in oceanic islands without well-developed stream systems. Ra and Rn isotopes were used as natural tracers of SGD. Nitrate, phosphate, and ammonium concentrations, ancillary water quality parameters, δ15N and δ18O of dissolved nitrate, and δ15N of primary producer tissue were measured. Our results pointed to discharge of low-salinity groundwater containing elevated concentrations of sewage-derived N at specific locations along Saipan’s coast. High SGD areas had lower salinity and pH, higher dissolved inorganic nitrogen concentrations, and elevated primary producer δ15N, indicative of sewage nitrogen inputs. We estimated that SGD could support 730–6400 and 3000–15,000 mol C d−1 of primary production in Tanapag and Garapan Lagoons, respectively, or up to approximately 60% of primary production in Garapan Lagoon. Efforts to improve water quality, reduce nutrient loading, and preserve coastal ecosystems must account for groundwater, since our results demonstrate that it is an important pathway of nitrogen delivery.


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