Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6385134 Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Estuarine health is affected by contamination from stormwater, particularly in highly-urbanised environments. For systems where catchment monitoring is insufficient, novel techniques must be employed to determine the impact of urban runoff on receiving water bodies. In the present work, estuarine monitoring and modelling were successfully employed to determine stormwater runoff volumes and establish an appropriate rainfall/runoff relationship capable of replicating fresh-water discharge due to the full range of precipitation conditions in the Sydney Estuary, Australia. Using estuary response to determine relationships between catchment rainfall and runoff is a widely applicable method and may be of assistance in the study of waterways where monitoring fluvial discharges is not practical or is beyond the capacity of management authorities. For the Sydney Estuary, the SCS-CN method replicated rainfall/runoff and was applied in numerical modelling experiments investigating the hydrodynamic characteristics affecting stratification and estuary recovery following high precipitation. Numerical modelling showed stratification in the Sydney Estuary was dominated by fresh-water discharge. Spring tides and up-estuary winds contributed to mixing and neap tides and down-estuary winds enhanced stratification.

Graphical abstractVertical salinity distributions measured along the axis of the Sydney estuary, a typically well-mixed system, showing stratification following an infrequent high-precipitation event in the catchment.Download high-res image (229KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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