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CHARACTERIZING DISSOLVED OXYGEN CONDITIONS IN ESTUARINE ENVIRONMENTS
Authors:J KEVIN SUMMERS  STEPHEN B WEISBERG  A FREDERICK HOLLAND  JINGYEE KOU  VIRGINIA D ENGLE  DENISE L BREITBERG  ROBERT J DIAZ
Institution:(1) Gulf Ecology Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1 Sabine Island Drive, Gulf Breeze, FL, 32561, U.S.A;(2) Versar, Inc., 9200 Rumsey Road, Columbia, SC, 21045, U.S.A;(3) South Carolina Marine Resources Research Institute, Fort Johnson Road, Charleston, SC, 29422, U.S.A;(4) National Biological Survey, Gulf Breeze Project Office, 1 Sabine Island Drive, Gulf Breeze, FL, 32561, U.S.A;(5) Benedict Estuarine Research Lab., Academy of Natural Sciences, Benedict, MD, 20612, U.S.A;(6) Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, VA, 23602, U.S.A
Abstract:Dissolved oxygen concentration, which is often measured inestuaries to quantify the results of and stresses associatedwith eutrophication, can be highly variable with time of dayand tidal stage. To assess how well dissolved oxygenconditions are characterized by typical monitoring programs,we conducted Monte Carlo sampling from 16 semi-continuous,31-day dissolved oxygen records collected from estuaries alongthe Atlantic and Gulf coasts to mimic three samplingstrategies: (1) systematic point-in-time sampling, (2) randompoint-in-time sampling, and (3) short-term continuous records.These strategies were evaluated for their accuracy inestimating mean oxygen concentration, minimum oxygenconcentration, and percent of time below a threshold value of2 ppm. Mean dissolved oxygen concentration was most accuratelyestimated in both estuarine regions by random point-in-timesampling, but this strategy required more than ten samplingsper month for the estimate to be within 0.5 ppm on 50% of thesimulations. Short-term continuous sampling (24–48 h)correctly identified estuaries in the Gulf of Mexico regionwhere dissolved oxygen concentrations of less than 2 ppm wereexperienced greater than 20% of the time. However, largetidal variations in Atlantic coast estuaries showed thismeasure to be inaccurate in these estuarine environments. Noneof the sampling strategies correctly identified month-longoxygen minima within 0.5 ppm for more than 50% of thesimulations. This inability to characterize correctlydissolved oxygen conditions could add significant uncertaintyto risk assessments, waste load allocation models, and otherwater quality evaluations that are the basis for developingwastewater treatment strategies and requirements. Perhaps moreimportantly, the inaccuracy with which conventional samplingprocedures characterize minimum dissolved oxygen valuessuggests that the extent of hypoxia in estuarine waters inbeing substantially underestimated.
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