DISSOLVED-OXYGEN AND NITRIFICATION IN THE UPPER FORTH ESTUARY DURING SUMMER (1982-92) - PATTERNS AND TRENDS

Citation
Pw. Balls et al., DISSOLVED-OXYGEN AND NITRIFICATION IN THE UPPER FORTH ESTUARY DURING SUMMER (1982-92) - PATTERNS AND TRENDS, Estuarine, coastal and shelf science, 42(1), 1996, pp. 117-134
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Oceanografhy,"Marine & Freshwater Biology
ISSN journal
02727714
Volume
42
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
117 - 134
Database
ISI
SICI code
0272-7714(1996)42:1<117:DANITU>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
River discharge, wastewater inputs and water quality data from summer surveys in the upper Forth estuary have been reviewed for the period 1 982-92. Particular attention has been given to dissolved oxygen and it s possible links to the processes involved in the cycling of dissolved inorganic nitrogen species. Average dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrati ons for a particular year are linked with river flow; DO concentration s were lowest in years when river flow was low. Average DO concentrati ons in the upper Forth estuary have increased since 1959 when records began; however, the inter-annual variability in river flow precludes t he detection of any significant trend over the present study period. A n important process contributing to the development of the oxygen mini mum in the upper estuary is nitrification. A comparison has been made between total oxidized nitrogen (TON) concentrations (i.e. nitrate + n itrite) observed in river water, and those predicted by extrapolating down estuary TON/salinity relationships to zero. The latter are always larger than the former with the greatest discrepancies observed under low river flows. It is suggested that under low flow conditions, the longer water residence times in the upper estuary enable nitrification to proceed to a greater extent. Ample particulate organic nitrogen (P ON) required for nitrification is demonstrated to exist in the turbidi ty maximum. This can originate from the river and/or the estuary and m ay be of natural or anthropogenic origin. Evidence is presented to sho w that the magnitude of the internally generated TON source has increa sed over the period under study. Maximum ammonia and nitrite concentra tions in the estuary tend to be associated with years in which river f low is low. The mid-estuarine concentration maxima for nitrite are ind icative of a benthic source, their locations are downstream of the nit rification-produced nitrate maximum. Their distributions are consisten t with processes breaking down PON in reducing sediments (e.g. denitri fication). Therefore, lower DO concentrations in the water column may be taken as indicative of more reducing conditions close to the surfac e sediments. An oxygen budget is constructed for the upper estuary. Wh ile gas exchange is identified as the major source of oxygen overall, DO from river water is likely to dominate at low salinity. The main si nks for oxygen in the estuary are nitrification, inputs of BOD and sed iment oxygen demand. The link between high river flows and improved wa ter quality is attributed not only to the oxygen contained in river wa ter, but also to the associated shift of the turbidity maximum further downstream where the volume of the estuary is greater. A complex pict ure emerges of chemical and physical processes tending to act in conce rt towards low DO concentrations under low river flow conditions. (C) 1996 Academic Press Limited