Present and future thermal regimes of intertidal groundwater springs in a threatened coastal ecosystem

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-26-4721-2022

Language of the publication
English
Date
2022-09-28
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • KarisAllen, Jason J.
  • Mohammed, Aaron A.
  • Tamborski, Joseph J.
  • Jamieson, Rob C.
  • Danielescu, Serban
  • Kurylyk, Barret L.
Publisher
European Geosciences Union

Abstract

In inland settings, groundwater discharge thermally modulates receiving surface water bodies and provides localized thermal refuges; however, the thermal influence of intertidal springs on coastal waters and their thermal sensitivity to climate change are not well studied. We addressed this knowledge gap with a field- and model-based study of a threatened coastal lagoon ecosystem in southeastern Canada. We paired analyses of drone-based thermal imagery with in situ thermal and hydrologic monitoring to estimate discharge to the lagoon from intertidal springs and groundwater-dominated streams in summer 2020. Results, which were generally supported by independent radon-based groundwater discharge estimates, revealed that combined summertime spring inflows (0.047 m3 s−1) were comparable to combined stream inflows (0.050 m3 s−1). Net advection values for the streams and springs were also comparable to each other but were 2 orders of magnitude less than the downwelling shortwave radiation across the lagoon. Although lagoon-scale thermal effects of groundwater inflows were small compared to atmospheric forcing, spring discharge dominated heat transfer at a local scale, creating pronounced cold-water plumes along the shoreline. A numerical model was used to interpret measured groundwater temperature data and investigate seasonal and multi-decadal groundwater temperature patterns. Modelled seasonal temperatures were used to relate measured spring temperatures to their respective aquifer source depths, while multi-decadal simulations forced by historic and projected climate data were used to assess long-term groundwater warming. Based on the 2020–2100 climate scenarios (for which 5-year-averaged air temperature increased up to 4.32∘), modelled 5-year-averaged subsurface temperatures increased 0.08–2.23∘ in shallow groundwater (4.2 m depth) and 0.32–1.42∘ in the deeper portion of the aquifer (13.9 m), indicating the depth dependency of warming. This study presents the first analysis of the thermal sensitivity of groundwater-dependent coastal ecosystems to climate change and indicates that coastal ecosystem management should consider potential impacts of groundwater warming.

Subject

  • Nature and environment,
  • Water,
  • Science and technology

Rights

Pagination

4721–4740

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1607-7938
1812-2116

Article

Journal title
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Journal volume
26
Journal issue
18
Accepted date
2022-08-23
Submitted date
2022-02-02

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Collection(s)

Climate and weather

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