Water Budget for Lake Trafford, a Natural Subtropical Lake in South Florida: An Example of Enhanced Groundwater Influx in a Subtropical Lake Subsequent to Organic Sediment Dredging

Author:

Thomas Serge1ORCID,Lucius Mark A.2ORCID,Kim Jong-Yeop3,Everham Edwin M.1,Dettmar Dana L.4,Missimer Thomas M.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Water School, Florida Gulf Coast University, 10501 FGCU Boulevard South, Fort Myers, FL 33965, USA

2. Darrin Fresh Water Institute, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 110 8th Street, Troy, NY 12180, USA

3. Department of Bio, Civil, and Environmental Engineering, U. A. Whitaker College of Engineering, 10501 FGCU Boulevard South, Fort Myers, FL 33965, USA

4. City of Sanibel Natural Resources Department, 800 Dunlop Road, Sanibel, FL 33957, USA

Abstract

A very detailed water budget analysis was conducted on Lake Trafford in South Florida. The inflow was dominated by surface water influx via five canals (61%), with groundwater influx constituting 12% and direct rainfall constituting 27%. Lake discharge was dominated by sheet flow (69%) and evapotranspiration (30.5%), with groundwater recharge of the hydraulically connected unconfined aquifer accounting for only 0.5%. The removal of 30 M tons (4.4 × 106 m3) of organic sediment impacted the groundwater influx, causing enhanced groundwater flow into the deeper parts of the lake and mixed flow along the banks, creating a rather unusual pattern. The large number of groundwater seepage meters used during this investigation led to a very reliable set of measurements with occasional failure of only a few meters. A distinctive relationship was found between the wet-season lake stage, heavy rainfall events, and pulses of exiting sheet flow from the lake. Estimation of the evapotranspiration loss using data collected from a weather station on the lake allowed the use of three different models, which, when averaged, produced results comparable to Lake Okeechobee (South Florida). A limitation of this investigation was the inability to directly measure sheet-flow discharges, which had to be estimated as a residual within the calculated water budget.

Funder

Division of Environmental Assessment and Restoration, Florida Department of Environmental Protection

Publisher

MDPI AG

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