Tropical Storm and Hurricane Wind Effects on Water Level, Salinity, and Sediment Transport in the River-Influenced Atchafalaya-Vermillion Bay System, Louisiana, USA.
Walker, N.D.
Estuaries, v. 24, p. 498-508.
Changes in circulation, water level, salinity, suspended sediments, and
sediment flux resulted from Tropical Storm Frances and Hurricane Georges
in the Vermilion-Atchafalaya Bay region during September 1998. Tropical
Storm Frances made landfall near Port Aransas, Texas, 400 km west of the
study area, and yet the strong and long-lived southeasterly winds resulted
in the highest water levels and salinity values of the year at one station
in West Cote Blanche Bay. Water levels were abnormally high across this
coastal bay system, although salinity impacts varied spatially. Over 24 h,
salinity increased from 5 to 20 psu at Site 1 on the east side of West
Cote Blanche Bay. Abnormally high salinities were recorded in Atchafalaya
Bay but not at stations in Vermilion Bay. On September 28, 1998, Hurricane
Georges made landfall near Biloxi, Mississippi, 240 km east of the study
area. On the west side of the storm, wind stress was from the north and
maximum winds locally reached 14 m s-1. The wind forcing and physical
responses of the bay system were analogous to those experienced during a
winter cold-front passage. During the strong, north wind stress period,
coastal water levels fell, salinity decreased, and sediment-laden bay
water was transported onto the inner shelf. As the north wind stress
subsided, a pulse of relatively saline water entered Vermilion Bay through
Southwest Pass increasing salinity from 5 to 20 psu over a 24-h period.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)-14 reflectance
imagery revealed the regional impacts of wind-wave resuspension and the
bay-shelf exchange of waters. During both storm events, suspended solid
concentrations increased by an order of magnitude from 75 to over 750 mg
l-1. The measurements demonstrated that even remote storm systems can have
marked impacts on the physical processes that affect ecological processes
in shallow coastal bay systems.
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