Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water...

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Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002

Transcript of Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water...

Page 1: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem

Alisa Britt Kepple

GIS in Water Resources

CE 394K.3

Fall 2002

Page 2: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

St. Lucie Inlet: South Eastern Florida Last stop on the Intercoastal Waterway

Page 3: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

1. Water Quality Sample Collection and Stream Networks:

Arc Map Layers

• Ideal sample collection sites will be chosen after completion of base map and query analysis – (base map to show idealized collection sites within proximity of most highly populated, commercialized and farmed areas and areas exhibiting highest nutrient concentrations).

• Interactive query and trace function analysis to determine most likely point source of highest nutrient concentrations along the stream network

Page 4: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Why Should We Care About DIN and PON Concentrations Leaving the St. Lucie Inlet?

* The National Academy of Sciences has proposed that the eutrophication caused by accelerated nitrogen inputs is the biggest threat to coastal resources in the world.

The Indian River lagoon provides an opportunity to study the direct

effects of agricultural rich - population growth on a regional estuary.

Page 5: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Questions to be answered with this study:

• What is the major source of anthropogenically introduced nitrogen to this system?– Fertilizer– Manure– Boat Pump out Positive source identification of nutrients to the lagoon using Arc

Hydro GIS stream tracing and multi-stable isotope tracers for positive source identification

Page 6: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

The problem at St. Lucie:Storm Water Run-off

disrupts the natural ecosytem

• Due to increased population, deforestation, agriculture and industrialization periods of heavy rain lead to:– Influx of nutrients

• Sustained algal blooms– Reduced dissolved oxygen concentrations- Fish Kills

– Obstruct Sunlight - Sea Grass Beds destroyed

– Erosion- Influx of Fine Grained Sediment– Sea Grass Beds and benthic fauna populations destroyed

Page 7: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Part One: Nitrogen Sources to the lagoon

The riverine flux increases in direct proportion to

• Anthropogenic Sources– Fertilizer

– Atmospheric pollution

– Nitrogen fixation by crops

– import/ export of food and feedstocks

– Sewage effluent

– Riverine input of introduced vegetation

• Natural Sources– In-situ N fixation (absent from most estuaries)

– Riverine input of indigenous vegetation

Page 8: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

14 N2

Trying to identify the SOURCE of nutrient pollution is a problem:

Euphotic Zone

Atmosphere

NO3-

15PON15 DON 15 NH4

+

N2O

15NO2-

Phytoplankton uptake and assimilation of the N-15 enriched nitrate

N-15 enriched PON incorporated in the sediment record

Sediment

PON (original signal)

Mineralization

NO3-

Page 9: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

The Determination and Relation Between Nitrate Concentrations in Rivers and the

Marine Environment

• How much nitrate or PON was introduced from a particular source is complicated by:

– The occurrence of multiple possible sources of nitrate and PON

– Overlapping N isotopic composition between point and non-point sources

– Co-existence of biogeochemical processes that alter the stable isotopic signature and concentrations of nitrate which is then incorporated into PON

Page 10: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

However, By Running an Additional Isotope on NO3-

Multi-isotope studies offer a direct means of source identification because different sources of nitrate and PON have isotopically distinct C, N, O signatures

Page 11: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

HUC 03

Indian River Lagoon Counties

Page 12: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Hydrologic Units

3080101

3080102

3080103

3080201

3080202

3080203

Page 13: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Watershed Counties and Rivers

POLK

LAKE

LEVY

CLAY

PASCO

DIXIE

DIXIE

UNION

BAKER

DUVAL

MARTIN

HARDEE

ORANGESUMTER

CITRUS

MARION

PUTNAM

TAYLOR

ECHOLS

NASSAUBROOKS

CLINCH

MANATEE

OSCEOLA

BREVARD

VOLUSIA

FLAGLER

ALACHUA

MADISON

LOWNDES

ST LUCIE

PINELLAS

HERNANDO

SEMINOLE

BRADFORD

SUWANNEE ST JOHNS

HAMILTON

COLUMBIA

HIGHLANDS

GILCHRIST

LAFAYETTE

OKEECHOBEE

INDIAN RIVERHILLSBOROUGH

Page 14: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Estimated Nitrogenous Fertilizer Application per County in 2001

-99

4.323785

0.961725

1.480908

1.114747

2.319292

0.734493

5.138920

3.080350

0.091683

1.469558 1.004775

0.992883

0.205902

0.746293

2.6192463.670489

1.288561

0.046296

2.287683

0.992820

0.403742

5.876928

0.218687

0.205956

0.374617

8.033311

3.474556

1.463605

9.709559

0.818216

1.232861

1.419924

3.474248

0.501187

9.656767

1.329375

0.059839

0.0906470.116352

1.923630

1.654812

0.531716

0.273427

0.444816

1.166625

5.282602

0.992883

0.037766

0.992883

1.809702

5.493150

3.474556

3.061913

0.205956

0.205902

1.114747

9.656765

1.114747

3.474555

1.329376

5.282601

9.709562

0.205902

9.709558

0.992883

0.205902

5.2826018.033311

0.218687

0.037766

0.273427

0.273427

0.205956

0.273427

0.218687

3.474555

0.992883

1.288561

0.734493

0.273427

5.138921

0.734493

0.273427

0.218687

1.114747

0.501187

0.734493

8.033312

0.734493

0.734493

5.138920

0.046296

0.091683

Page 15: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Farms and Cattle Distribution in 2000

Page 16: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Water Discharge Permits and Real time Stream flow Monitoring

Stations

Page 17: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Proposed Sampling Sites

POLK

LAKE

LEVY

CLAY

PASCO

DIXIE

DIXIE

UNION

BAKER

DUVAL

MARTIN

HARDEE

ORANGESUMTER

CITRUS

MARION

PUTNAM

TAYLOR

ECHOLS

NASSAUBROOKS

CLINCH

MANATEE

OSCEOLA

BREVARD

VOLUSIA

FLAGLER

ALACHUA

MADISON

LOWNDES

ST LUCIE

PINELLAS

HERNANDO

SEMINOLE

BRADFORD

SUWANNEE ST JOHNS

HAMILTON

COLUMBIA

HIGHLANDS

GILCHRIST

LAFAYETTE

OKEECHOBEE

INDIAN RIVERHILLSBOROUGH

Page 18: Nitrogen Sources and Fluxes to Indian River Lagoon Ecosystem Alisa Britt Kepple GIS in Water Resources CE 394K.3 Fall 2002.

Federally Endangered SpeciesAmerican AlligatorAtlantic Hawksbill TurtleAtlantic Green Sea TurtleEastern Indigo SnakeLeatherback Sea TurtleLoggerhead Sea TurtleShort Nosed SturgeonWest India ManateeSoutheastern Beach MouseBachman’s WarblerBald EagleFlorida Scrub JayKirtland’s WarblerPeregrine FalconPiping PloverRed WoodpeckerRoseate TernSnail KiteWood Stork