Seasonal and tidal variations in hydrologic inputs drive salt marsh porewater nitrate dynamics

Author:

Grande Emilio12,Seybold Erin C.3,Tatariw Corianne4,Visser Ate5ORCID,Braswell Anna67,Arora Bhavna8,Birgand François9,Haskins John10,Zimmer Margaret1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California USA

2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences California State University East Bay Hayward California USA

3. Kansas Geological Survey University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama USA

5. Nuclear and Chemical Sciences Division Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore California USA

6. School of Forest Resources and Conservation, Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Program University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

7. Florida Sea Grant Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Gainesville Florida USA

8. Energy Geosciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley California USA

9. Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

10. Water Quality Monitoring Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve Elkhorn California USA

Abstract

AbstractSalt marshes remove terrestrially derived nutrients en route to coasts. While these systems play a critical role in improving water quality, we still have a limited understanding of the spatiotemporal variability of biogeochemically reactive solutes and processes within salt marshes. We implemented a high‐frequency sampling system to monitor sub‐hourly nitrate () concentrations in salt marsh porewater at Elkhorn Slough in central California, USA. We instrumented three marsh positions along an elevation gradient subjected to different amounts of tidal inundation, which we predicted would lead to varied biogeochemical characteristics and hydrological interactions. At each marsh position, we continuously monitored porewater concentrations at depths of 10, 30, and 50 cm and porewater levels measured at 70 cm depth over seven deployments of ~10 days each that spanned seasonal wet/dry periods common to Mediterranean climates. We quantified tidal event hysteresis between and water level to understand how concentrations and sources fluctuate across tidal cycles. In dry periods, the ‐porewater level relationship indicated that the source was likely estuarine surface water that flooded the transect during high tides and the salt marsh was a sink. In wet periods, the ‐porewater level relationship suggested the salt marsh was a source of . These findings suggest that tidal and seasonal hydrologic fluxes together control porewater dynamics and export and influence ecological processes in coastal environments.

Funder

California Sea Grant, University of California, San Diego

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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