Abstract The Salish Sea is a large, fjordal estuarine system opening onto the northeast Pacific Ocean. It develops a strong estuarine exchange flow that draws in nutrients from the ocean and flushes the system on timescales of several months. It is difficult to apply existing dynamical theories of estuarine circulation there because of the extreme bathymetric complexity. A realistic numerical model of the system was manipulated to have stronger and weaker tides to explore the sensitivity of the exchange flow to tides. This sensitivity was explored over two timescales: annual means and the spring‐neap. Two theories for the estuarine exchange flow are: (a) “gravitational circulation” where exchange is driven by the baroclinic pressure gradient due to along‐channel salinity variation, and (b) “tidal pumping” where tidal advection combined with flow separation forces the exchange. Past observations suggested gravitational circulation was of leading importance in the Salish Sea. We find here that the exchange flow increases with stronger tides, particularly in annual averages, suggesting it is controlled by tidal pumping. However, the landward salt transport due to the exchange flow decreases with stronger tides because greater mixing decreases the salinity difference between incoming and outgoing water. These results may be characteristic of estuarine systems that have rough topography and strong tides.
more »
« less
Estuarine Exchange Flow in the Albemarle‐Pamlico Estuarine System
Abstract Estuarine exchange flow controls the salt balance and regulates biogeochemistry in an estuary. The Albemarle‐Pamlico estuarine system (APES) is the largest coastal lagoon in the U.S. and historically susceptible to a series of environmental issues including salt water intrusion and eutrophication, yet its estuarine exchange flow is poorly understood. Here, we investigate the estuarine exchange flow in the APES, its tributary estuaries (Pamlico and Neuse), and sub‐basin Albemarle Sound using the total exchange flow analysis framework based on results from a deterministic numerical model. We find the following: (a) Dynamics controlling estuarine exchange flow in the APES vary spatially and depend on timescales considered. At inlets, estuarine exchange flows respond to both tidal prism and residual water levels at weather‐to‐spring/neap timescales. At a long quasi‐steady timescale represented as annual means, estuarine exchange flow is dominated by barotropic flow. Within the tributary estuaries, estuarine exchange flows at timescales of wind periods are controlled by wind‐induced straining, whereas the quasi‐steady state condition is dominated by gravitational circulation. At Albemarle Sound, exchange flow is dominated by the residual water levels at weather‐to‐spring/neap timescales, while at quasi‐steady state it is controlled by barotropic flow. (b) At the quasi‐steady annual timescale, the salt content decreases with river discharge. At the weather‐to‐spring/neap timescales, salt content is insensitive to variations in estuarine exchange flow, except for within Albemarle Sound. (c) Estuarine exchange flow likely influences the biogeochemistry of the APES by playing a key role in regulating the flushing efficiency and material exchange, a role that has been previously overlooked.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 2052889
- PAR ID:
- 10626854
- Publisher / Repository:
- AGU / Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Volume:
- 130
- Issue:
- 8
- ISSN:
- 2169-9275
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Abstract Estuarine exchange flow regulates aspects of estuarine biogeochemical processes; however, other tracer‐specific factors can also play an important role. Here, we analyze realistic simulations from a coupled physical‐biological model to quantify volume‐integrated budgets of heat, total nitrogen (TN), and dissolved oxygen (DO) in the Salish Sea and its sub‐basins. Our goal is to evaluate the role of exchange flow in shaping tracer budgets, extending beyond the traditionally emphasized salt budget in estuaries. The three budgets reveal that exchange flow is a consistently important term with a clear annual cycle, but its relative role differs across tracers. For heat, exchange flow‐driven cooling is primarily offset by atmospheric heating, with the two reaching opposing seasonal extremes in summer. For TN, seasonal variability is dominated by exchange flow, whereas the annual mean is dominated by inputs from rivers and wastewater outfalls, and a loss due to benthic denitrification. The DO budget is the most complex: sinks from exchange flow export and respiration are balanced by sources from photosynthesis and air‐sea transfer. Across all three budgets, the sign of the inflow‐outflow tracer concentration differences determines whether exchange flow imports or exports tracers. These concentration differences, which are strongly influenced by coastal wind conditions, set the distinct seasonality of the exchange flow budget terms, while variations in the exchange flow volume transport play a minor role. Our budget quantification approach, based on archived model output, can be extended to other tracers such as carbon and other estuaries for long‐term budget studies.more » « less
-
Abstract The salt balance in estuaries is maintained by the outflow from the river, which removes salt from the estuary, and dispersive processes, which drive downgradient fluxes bringing salt into the estuary. We analyzed the salt fluxes in a realistic model of the North River, a tidal salt marsh estuary, using a quasi-Lagrangian moving plane reference based on the theory of Dronkers and van de Kreeke. Our study confirms their theoretical finding that in a plane moving with the tides, all landward salt flux results directly from shear dispersion, that is, the spatial correlation between cross-sectional variations in velocity and salinity. We separated cross-sectional variations in velocity and salinity not only based on their lateral and vertical components but also by distinct regions of the cross section: the main channel and the marsh. In this way, we quantified the salt flux contributions from vertical and lateral shear dispersion, as well as from trapping—the salt flux due to the difference between the mean velocity and salinity of the main channel compared to the marsh. Trapping accounted for up to half of the total landward salt flux in the estuary during spring tides but decreased to about one-quarter during neap tides. Within the channel, the primary mode of dispersion shifted from lateral shear dispersion due to flow separation during spring tides to vertical shear dispersion due to tidal straining during neap tides. These results demonstrate the important role of topographically induced dispersion on maintaining the salt balance, particularly in tidally dominated estuaries.more » « less
-
Abstract A salinity variance framework is used to study mixing in the Salish Sea, a large fjordal estuary. Output from a realistic numerical model is used to create salinity variance budgets for individual basins within the Salish Sea for 2017–19. The salinity variance budgets are used to quantify the mixing in each basin and estimate the numerical mixing, which is found to contribute about one-third of the total mixing in the model. Whidbey Basin has the most intense mixing, due to its shallow depth and large river flow. Unlike in most other estuarine systems previously studied using the salinity variance method, mixing in the Salish Sea is controlled by the river flow and does not exhibit a pronounced spring–neap cycle. A “mixedness” analysis is used to determine when mixed water is expelled from the estuary. The river flow is correlated with mixed water removal, but the coupling is not as tight as with the mixing. Because the mixing is so highly correlated with the river flow, the long-term average approximation M = Q r s out s in can be used to predict the mixing in the Salish Sea and Puget Sound with good accuracy, even without any temporal averaging. Over a 3-yr average, the mixing in Puget Sound is directly related to the exchange flow salt transport.more » « less
-
Salt intrusion poses a global threat to estuaries and deltas, exacerbated by climate change, drought, and sea level rise. This observational study investigates the impact of river discharge, wind, and tidal variations on salt intrusion in a branching river delta during drought. The complexity and spatial extent of deltas make comprehensive measurements challenging and rare. In this paper, we present a 17‐week data set of a historic drought in the Rhine‐Meuse Delta, capturing dynamics in a multiple‐channel system in a wide range of conditions. Key characteristics of this low‐lying delta are its branching channel network and complicated, human‐controlled discharge. Despite the system's complexity, we found that the subtidal salt intrusion length, defined by the 2 PSU isohaline , follows a power law relationship with Rhine River discharge . Subtidal water level variations contribute to short‐term variations in intrusion length, shifting the limit of salt intrusion upstream and downstream with a distance similar to the tidal excursion length. This can be attributed to the up‐estuary transport of seawater, caused by the estuary adjusting to variations in water levels at its mouth. However, spring‐neap variation in the tidal range does not alter the subtidal salt intrusion length. Side branches exhibit distinct dynamics from the main river, and their most important control is the downstream salinity. We show that treating the side branches separately is crucial to incorporate the highly variable downstream boundary condition, and may apply in other deltas or complex estuaries.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

