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The divergent environmental characteristics of permanently-open,seasonally-open and normally-closed estuaries of south-western Australia
Citation
Chuwen, BM and Hoeksema, SD and Potter, IC, The divergent environmental characteristics of permanently-open,seasonally-open and normally-closed estuaries of south-western Australia, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 85, (2009) pp. 12-21. ISSN 0272-7714 (2009) [Refereed Article]
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Copyright Statement
Copyright © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. The definitive version is available at http://www.sciencedirect.com
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2009.03.030
Abstract
This study has compared the environmental characteristics of the basins and saline lower reaches of the
tributaries of eight estuaries on the south coast of Western Australia, which differ in their degree of
connectivity with the ocean. Although four estuaries between 115.1 and 121.8E along that coast remain
permanently open to the ocean, the others only become open when the volume of river discharge is
sufficient to breach the prominent sand bars at their mouths, which occurs annually following heavy
winter and early spring rainfall in some estuaries (seasonally open) and infrequently in others (normally
closed). Estuaries to the west of 118.5E are predominantly permanently open, e.g. Oyster Harbour, or
seasonally open, e.g. Broke, Irwin and Wilson inlets, whereas those further east, e.g. Wellstead Estuary
and Hamersley, Culham and Stokes inlets, where annual rainfall and thus discharge are much lower, only
become open after exceptionally heavy discharge. In permanently and seasonally-open estuaries,
pronounced haloclines and oxyclines are present in the narrow rivers but not the wide basins where the
waters are subjected to wind-driven mixing. The extent of cyclical seasonal fluctuations in environmental
conditions differed markedly among the three seasonally-open estuaries and between years in
one of those systems. These differences reflected variations in the relationship between the volume of
fluvial discharge, which is determined by a combination of the amount of local rainfall, catchment size
and extent of clearing of native vegetation, and the amount of intrusion by marine waters, which is
largely controlled by the size and duration of the opening of the estuary mouth. The mean seasonal
salinities in the basins of the three normally-closed estuaries increased over three years of very low
rainfall to 64 in the deepest of these estuaries (Stokes Inlet) to 145 in Hamersley Inlet and to 296 in the
shallowest estuary (Culham Inlet). These results demonstrate that the environmental characteristics of
estuaries on the south coast of Western Australia differ markedly, even among those of the same type,
e.g. seasonally-open estuaries or normally-closed estuaries.
Item Details
Item Type: | Refereed Article |
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Keywords: | microtidal estuaries physico-chemical characteristics estuary mouth closure fluvial discharge marine intrusion Western Australia; south coast, 116.36-121.19E, 33.80-35.04S |
Research Division: | Earth Sciences |
Research Group: | Oceanography |
Research Field: | Biological oceanography |
Objective Division: | Expanding Knowledge |
Objective Group: | Expanding knowledge |
Objective Field: | Expanding knowledge in the mathematical sciences |
UTAS Author: | Chuwen, BM (Dr Ben Chuwen) |
ID Code: | 71844 |
Year Published: | 2009 |
Web of Science® Times Cited: | 25 |
Deposited By: | Sustainable Marine Research Collaboration |
Deposited On: | 2011-08-10 |
Last Modified: | 2022-08-17 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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