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Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack (TAMU) Graduate students: Bryan Allison, Tim Assal, Rachel Butzler, George Gable, David Hoeinghaus, Hsiu-Ping Li, Carrie Miller, Jose-Vicente Montoya

Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

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Page 1: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the

San Antonio Bay System

Stephen E. Davis, III

co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack (TAMU)

Graduate students: Bryan Allison, Tim Assal, Rachel Butzler, George Gable, David Hoeinghaus, Hsiu-Ping Li, Carrie Miller, Jose-Vicente Montoya

Page 2: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Why study inflows to estuaries?

George Ward (UT)

Page 3: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Why study inflows to estuaries?

INFLOWS

inundation

salinity

FLORA

CO

NS

UM

ER

S

Conceptual framework for estuarine research…and TexEMP modelling (TWDB and TPWD)

How much inflow does a given estuary need? When? For how long? How often?

materials

Page 4: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Why study inflows to estuaries?

From 2002 State Water Plan

Page 5: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Why study multiple scales in estuaries?

Spatial Scales of Consideration

• Sites of interaction between Watershed-level processes and oceanographic processes

– Regional climate

– Tides

– Watershed development

• Estuarine zonation

– Tide/elevation

• sub-tidal to high inter-tidal

– Freshwater inflow/flushing

• oliogohaline to polyhaline

http://tx.usgs.gov/basins.html

Page 6: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Why study multiple scales in estuaries?

Temporal Scales of Consideration

• Inter-annual variability

– ENSO forcing

– Disturbance regime

– Watershed development

• Intra-annual variability

– Hydrodynamics

• Anthropogenic effects

• Diurnal and spring/neap

• Wind forcing, storm effects

– Freshwater inflow/flushing

• Seasonal climate

How to characterize?

• Number of pulses

• Magnitude of pulses

• Duration of pulses

• Period between pulses

Page 7: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Marsh Studies1. Water quality2. Hydrodynamics3. Vegetation & soils 4. Marsh inundation5. Food Web patterns

Guadalupe Estuary

Lower Guadalupe River1. Discharge and

stage (USGS gauge)

2. Nutrient and TSS Loadings

Open Water/Bays1. Dataflow mapping2. Water quality/

nutrients3. Lower food web

dynamics

Seadrift gauge(TCOON)

GBRA #1 gauge(TCOON)

Page 8: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Whooping cranes at ANWR

Photo by Kristin LaFever

Page 9: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

ANWR Creek and Marsh sampling sites

Page 10: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Spatio-temporal varaibility in creek salinity

OCT/NOV 2003 JUL 2004FEB 2004

salin

ity (

‰)

JUN/JUL 2003

Boat Ramp

Pump Canal

Sundown Bay2-week salinity snapshots at three sites

Page 11: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

ANWR tidal creek salinity June 2003–May 2005

“average” year

wet year

Boat Ramp

Pump Canal

Sundown Bay

Page 12: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Seasonal Salinity at Pump Canal June 2003–May 2005

Page 13: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

70000

80000

90000

100000

Jul-

03

Aug-

03

Sep-

03

Oct-

03

Nov-

03

Dec-

03

Jan-

04

Feb-

04

Mar-

04

Apr-

04

May-

04

Jun-

04

Jul-

04

Aug-

04

Sep-

04

Oct-

04

Nov-

04

Dec-

04

Jan-

05

Feb-

05

Mar-

05

Apr-

05

May-

05

Guadalupe River discharge @ Victoria (cfs)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Salinity

Discharge Boat Ramp salinity

Do Guadalupe River inflows affect ANWR creek salinity?

Page 14: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Do Guadalupe River inflows affect ANWR creek salinity?

YES, but other factors are also at work.

including: upland runoff, direct precipitation, groundwater exchange, wind forcing, tides, barge traffic, etc.

Page 15: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Dataflow in Action

Measures: LAT/LONG, Temperature, Conductivity/Salinity, Transmittance, Chlorophyll a, CDOM, Depth, and PAR

At approximately 8 second intervals from a vessel running at 20 kts.

pumpbox

ram

de-bubbler

GPS/depth

datalogger

temp/cond

Page 16: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Tracking responses to Guadalupe River inflow events using Dataflow

Page 17: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 18: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 19: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 20: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 21: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 22: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack
Page 23: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Quantifying hydrologic connectivity across the marsh

tidal creek

ponds

Page 24: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Inferring connectivity using paired water level recorders

Page 25: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Predicting creek hydrodynamics AND marsh inundation

Page 26: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Understanding anthropogenic impacts

Page 27: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Seasonal dynamics of wolfberryN

um

be

r o

f b

err

ies

93% 98% Whooping cranes

2003 2004

Page 28: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

BR Marsh Vegetation

0

4

8

12

16

20

-35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5

delta_13C

delta_15N

Algae

Borrichia

Batis

WolfberryWhite Aster

Carax

Salicornia

C3 succulents

Spartina

Distictlis

C4 grasses

Page 29: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

BR Channel

0

4

8

12

16

20

-35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5

delta_13C

delta_15N

LadyfishSpot

Brown ShrimpBlue Crab

Ruppia

Southern Flounder

Inland Silverside

Hardhead

Black Drum

Gizzard ShadMullet

Pinfish

Red Drum

Page 30: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

BR Connected Pond

0

4

8

12

16

20

-35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5

delta_13C

delta_15N Mullet

Ladyfish

Spot

Ruppia

Brown Shrimp

PinfishBlack Drum

Blue Crab

Page 31: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

BR Isolated Pond

0

4

8

12

16

20

-35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5

delta_13C

delta_15N

Algae

Floc

Brown Shrimp

Blue Crab

Inland Silverside

Ladyfish

Sailfin Molly

Page 32: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Plankton incubation chamber array

flow-through phytoplankton reaction chambers

peristaltic pump

media reservoir

temperature control bath

light box with 3 chambers

Page 33: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Zooplankton (bio-volume) and Phytoplankton (fluorescence) response to continuous vs. pulsed mode of

delivery under different hydrologic flushing rates

Fluorescence (Integrated)

0

2

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12

14

0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08

Flushing (d-1)

Integrated Fluorescence

Continuous

Pulsed

Zooplankton (Integrated)

0

10

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40

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60

70

0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08

Flushing (d-1)

Integrated Zooplankton

Continuous

Pulsed

Mean annual flushing

Page 34: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

What have we learned thus far?

1. Large pulses affect water levels/connectivity, BUT other

factors are more important during median flows.• Connectivity affects food web patterns

2. River inflows drive bay-wide water quality, BUT other

factors may be equally important in ANWR tidal creeks.• Entire lagoonal estuary can be fresh

3. Marsh vegetation is sensitive to intra-annual variations

in inundation and salinity.• Greenhouse studies

4. Water column mostly net autotrophic

5. Phytoplankton and zooplankton show positive response

to pulsed inflows.

Page 35: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

Funding for TX estuarine inflow research

Page 36: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

On-line Access To Data (http://wfsc.tamu.edu/davislab)

Page 37: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

On-line Access To Data (http://wfsc.tamu.edu/davislab)

Page 38: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

On-line Access To Data (http://wfsc.tamu.edu/davislab)

Page 39: Physical, Chemical, and Biological Responses to Inflow Events in the San Antonio Bay System Stephen E. Davis, III co-PIs: Dan Roelke (TAMU) and Doug Slack

On-line Access To Data (http://wfsc.tamu.edu/davislab)