Interactions between sediment processes and ecosystem responses in the Green Bay of Lake Michigan

被引:1
|
作者
Khazaei, Bahram [1 ,2 ,3 ,5 ]
Bravo, Hector R. R. [3 ]
Hamidi, Sajad A. A. [4 ]
机构
[1] Natl Ocean Serv, Coast Survey Dev Lab, Silver Spring, MD USA
[2] Univ Corp Atmospher Res, Cooperat Programs Advancement Earth Syst Sci, Boulder, CO USA
[3] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Milwaukee, WI USA
[4] Slippery Rock Univ, Dept Phys & Engn, Slippery Rock, PA USA
[5] NOAA, Natl Ocean Serv, Coast Survey Dev Lab, Silver Spring, MD 20910 USA
来源
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-WATER | 2023年 / 10卷 / 05期
关键词
ecosystem restoration; estuary and lake systems; Green Bay; sediments and nutrients; water quality; HIGH-TURBIDITY EVENTS; FRESH-WATER; DREISSENID MUSSELS; SEASONAL HYPOXIA; ZEBRA MUSSEL; FOX-RIVER; IN-SITU; PHOSPHORUS; RESUSPENSION; TRANSPORT;
D O I
10.1002/wat2.1668
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Estuaries, in particular freshwater estuaries, provide valuable economic, social, and ecological services, but their ecosystems are often heavily stressed. Located in the Laurentian Great Lakes basin, Green Bay is a large freshwater estuary and a prominent example of a degraded ecosystem due to intensive human interventions and rapid development. Excessive amounts of contaminants and nutrients were discharged to the bay by inflowing tributaries for almost half a century, while in contrast Green Bay's seasonal-, morphological-, and physically-restricted mixing is unable to export a significant portion of those materials out of the bay, that is, Green Bay behaves as an efficient retention basin for the Lake Michigan. Consequently, several environmental and public health-related issues have risen in Green Bay and turned the lower bay into an area of environmental concern since the 1980s. To address these challenges, restoration programs were developed, including the development of monitoring programs, scientific research, and remedial action plans. There is a consensus that accelerated loading rates of contaminated and nutrient-rich sediments are a major driver of the environmental crisis in the bay, yet the fate and transport patterns of Green Bay sediments are not clearly understood. While field observations in Green Bay are season-limited and costly, advanced computing techniques provided opportunities to refine our understanding of sediment dynamics in this estuarine system. This review of existing knowledge on Green Bay sediment processes can help to better understand the interplay between sediments, and physical/biogeochemical activities in estuarine systems and contributes conceptually to the restoration of degraded aquatic ecosystems.This article is categorized under:Science of Water > Hydrological ProcessesScience of Water > Water QualityWater and Life > Stresses and Pressures on Ecosystems
引用
下载
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Diet of burbot in Green Bay and western Lake Michigan with comparison to other waters
    Fratt, TW
    Coble, DW
    Copes, F
    Bruesewitz, RE
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 1997, 23 (01) : 1 - 10
  • [42] Impacts of Climate Change on Hydrodynamics and Thermal Regime of Green Bay, Lake Michigan
    Hamidi, Sajad A.
    Khazaei, Bahram
    Bravo, Hector
    WORLD ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCES CONGRESS 2024: CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON THE WORLD WE LIVE IN, 2024, : 143 - 153
  • [43] Water column nutrient processing rates in rivermouths of Green Bay (Lake Michigan)
    James H. Larson
    Mary Anne Evans
    Faith A. Fitzpatrick
    Paul C. Frost
    Sean Bailey
    Robert Kennedy
    William F. James
    William B. Richardson
    Paul C. Reneau
    Biogeochemistry, 2019, 142 : 73 - 93
  • [44] Resolution of optical gradients and pursuit of optical closure for Green Bay, Lake Michigan
    O'Donnell, David M.
    Effler, Steven W.
    Perkins, MaryGail
    Strait, Christopher
    Lee, Zhongping
    Greb, Steven
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2013, 39 : 161 - 172
  • [45] Role of trace metal co-limitation in cyanobacterial blooms of Maumee Bay (Lake Erie) and Green Bay (Lake Michigan)
    Larson, James H. H.
    Loftin, Keith A. A.
    Stelzer, Erin A. A.
    Costello, David M. M.
    Bailey, Sean W. W.
    Evans, Mary Anne
    Givens, Carrie E. E.
    Fogarty, Lisa R. R.
    JOURNAL OF FRESHWATER ECOLOGY, 2023, 38 (01)
  • [46] Diet composition and overlap for adult walleye, lake whitefish, and yellow perch in Green Bay, Lake Michigan
    Koenig, Lucas D.
    Dembkowski, Daniel J.
    Hansen, Scott P.
    Tsehaye, Iyob
    Paoli, Tammie J.
    Zorn, Troy G.
    Isermann, Daniel A.
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2022, 48 (06) : 1681 - 1695
  • [47] CURRENTS AND HEAT FLUXES INDUCE STRATIFICATION LEADING TO HYPOXIA IN GREEN BAY, LAKE MICHIGAN
    Bravo, Hector R.
    Hamidi, Sajad A.
    Klump, J. Val
    Waples, James T.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 36TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS: DELTAS OF THE FUTURE AND WHAT HAPPENS UPSTREAM, 2015, : 669 - 678
  • [48] Spawning Locations, Movements, and Potential for Stock Mixing of Walleye in Green Bay, Lake Michigan
    Izzo, Lisa K.
    Dembkowski, Daniel
    Hayden, Todd
    Binder, Tom
    Vandergoot, Christopher
    Hogler, Steven
    Donofrio, Michael
    Zorn, Troy
    Krueger, Charles C.
    Isermann, Daniel
    NORTH AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES MANAGEMENT, 2023, 43 (03) : 695 - 714
  • [49] Spatial analysis of toxic or otherwise bioactive cyanobacterial peptides in Green Bay, Lake Michigan
    Bartlett, Sarah L.
    Brunner, Shelby L.
    Klump, J. Val
    Houghton, Erin M.
    Miller, Todd R.
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2018, 44 (05) : 924 - 933
  • [50] THE ROLE OF SEDIMENTS IN THE NITROGEN BUDGET OF LOWER GREEN-BAY, LAKE-MICHIGAN
    CHEN, RL
    KEENEY, DR
    MCINTOSH, TH
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 1983, 9 (01) : 23 - 31