Assessing Coastal Plumes in a Region of Multiple Discharges: The US-Mexico Border

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The San Diego/Tijuana border region has several environmental challenges with regard to assessing water quality impacts resulting from local coastal ocean discharges for which transport is not hindered by political boundaries. While an understanding of the fate and transport of these discharged plumes has a broad audience, the spatial and temporal scales of the physical processes present numerous challenges in conducting assessment with any fidelity. To address these needs, a data-driven model of the transport of both shoreline and offshore discharges is developed and operated in a hindcast mode for a four-year period to analyze regional connectivity between the discharges and the receiving of waters and the coastline. The plume exposure hindcast model is driven by surface current data generated by a network of high-frequency radars. Observations provided by both boat-based CTD measurements and fixed oceanographic moorings are used with the Roberts-Snyder-Baumgartner model to predict the plume rise height. The surface transport model outputs are compared with shoreline samples of fecal indicator bacteria (FIB), and the skill of the model to assess low water quality is evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Issue Date
2009-10
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, v.43, no.19, pp.7450 - 7457

ISSN
0013-936X
DOI
10.1021/es900775p
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/103404
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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