6 results on '"Jaffe, Bruce E."'
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2. Bathymetric Comparisons Adjacent to the Louisiana Barrier Islands: Processes of Large-Scale Change
- Author
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Jaffe, Bruce E.
- Published
- 1997
3. Spatial Trends in Tidal Flat Shape and Associated Environmental Parameters in South San Francisco Bay
- Author
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Bearman, Joshua A., Friedrichs, Carl T., Jaffe, Bruce E., and Foxgrover, Amy C.
- Published
- 2010
4. South San Francisco Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project--A Synthesis of Phase-1 Mercury Studies.
- Author
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Marvin-DiPasquale, Mark, Slotton, Darell, Ackerman, Josh T., Downing-Kunz, Maureen, Jaffe, Bruce E., Foxgrover, Amy C., Achete, Fernanda, and van der Wegen, Mick
- Subjects
MERCURY ,WETLAND restoration ,PONDS ,SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project (SBSPRP) encompasses over 6,000 hectares of former salt production ponds along the south edge of the San Francisco Bay and represents the largest wetland restoration effort on the west coast of North America. A series of studies associated with Phase 1 (2010-2018) restoration activities that are focused on a historically mercury contaminated slough and series of ponds within the restoration area have recently been completed. This report brings together the key findings of these loosely coordinated studies and integrates the results into a more comprehensive and holistic product that informs future restoration activities associated with the SBSPRP and elsewhere. The focus of the Phase 1 studies was organized around two primary restoration management actions associated with Alviso Slough and its adjacent former salt ponds. The first action was a levee breach associated with pond A6 along the lower reach of Alviso Slough. The second action was associated with an adjustable tidal control structure at pond A8 (A8-TCS) that was constructed to reintroduce muted tidal connectivity between the upper portion of Alviso Slough and an area that comprises three hydrologically interconnected former salt ponds (ponds A5, A7 and A8, referred to as the A8-complex). During a 6-year period (2011-2017), the A8-TCS was gradually opened from one gate (1-gate condition, 1.5-meters wide opening) to eight gates (8-gate condition, 12.2-meters wide opening). This report focuses on addressing the extent to which these two management actions resulted in demonstrable changes in mercury concentrations associated with biota, surface water or bed sediment, and with mercury transport and flux associated with Alviso Slough bed sediment erosion caused by an increase in tidal prism. This report documents key findings associated with the breach of pond A6: (1) a short-term spike in slough fish (Mississippi silverside) total mercury concentration in lower Alviso Slough; (2) a short-term spike in surfacewater particulate total mercury in lower Alviso Slough; (3) significant sediment scour in Alviso Slough adjacent to and downstream of the breach points; (4) a decrease in surfacesediment methylmercury (as a percentage of total mercury) in lower Alviso Slough; (5) the transport of 70 kilograms per year of sediment-associated total mercury into pond A6 during the first 2 years following the breach but with much of this coming from outside of Alviso Slough, presumably from the nearby shallows, Guadalupe Slough, and the larger southern San Francisco Bay area; and (6) a slowing of bed sediment erosion in lower Alviso Slough 3-5 years after the breaching of pond A6. Other key findings associated with the construction and gradual opening of the A8-TCS are documented in this report: (1) a short-term total mercury spike in prey fish (Gillichthys mirabilis [longjaw mudsucker] and Gasterosteus aculeatus [three-spined stickleback]) and tern eggs within the Alviso pond complex, and in Alviso Slough Mississippi silverside, all of which were attributable to construction activities within and immediately adjacent to the Alviso pond complex prior to the initial gate opening of the A8-TCS; (2) multiple lines of evidence that indicate the transition from three gates (3-gate condition, 15 feet [4.6 meters]) to five gates (5-gate condition, 25 feet [7.6 meters]) open at the A8-TCS may represent a critical tipping point beyond which the sudden increase in tidal prism resulted in increased bed sediment erosion, and the reversal of suspended sediment flux direction, towards the bay, for a prolonged period (1.6 years); (3) this period concluded with a substantial spike in surface-water methylmercury in Alviso Slough, which preceded (by 6 months) a significant spike in silverside total mercury concentrations in Alviso Slough that we ultimately attribute to the opening of five gates initiated two years prior; (4) a steady year-over-year decrease in Alviso Slough surface-water total mercury and methylmercury concentrations on a volumetric basis that is due to dilution driven by the increased tidal prism linked to the increased number of A8-TCS open gates; (5) a steady year-over-year increase in wintertime (December--February) particulate total mercury concentration on a gravimetric basis in Alviso Slough that is linked to increasing bed sediment erosion of long-buried sediment horizons containing elevated concentrations of legacy mercury (derived from historic mining activities in the watershed); (6) the mass flux of suspended sediment, particulate total mercury, and particulate methylmercury past the A8-TCS was into the A8-complex during the full period of high-resolution water quality monitoring (February 2016--February 2018), which included the transition from five to eight gates open at the A8-TCS; and (7) the opening of eight gates resulted in a decrease of water flux into the A8-complex and a reversal in model-predicted filter-passing total mercury and filter-passing methylmercury flux from the A8-complex being a sink for these two species during a 5-gate condition to being a source to Alviso Slough during an 8-gate condition. Although this report is not intended to be prescriptive in terms of the next steps the SBSPRP should or should not take, the totality of the findings presented provide critical process-level information regarding the extent and the duration of spikes in mercury levels in water, sediment, fish, and birds, which appeared to result from the two management actions under study. Thus, these results can be used to anticipate similar ecosystem responses associated with similar management actions that may be considered in the future. We also conclude this report by highlighting unanswered questions associated with mercury dynamics as it relates to the restoration project, and possible future directions for research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Discontinuous hindcast simulations of estuarine bathymetric change: A case study from Suisun Bay, California
- Author
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Ganju, Neil K., Jaffe, Bruce E., and Schoellhamer, David H.
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *SIMULATION methods & models , *CASE studies , *WAVE energy , *CALIBRATION , *ESTUARINE sediments - Abstract
Abstract: Simulations of estuarine bathymetric change over decadal timescales require methods for idealization and reduction of forcing data and boundary conditions. Continuous simulations are hampered by computational and data limitations and results are rarely evaluated with observed bathymetric change data. Bathymetric change data for Suisun Bay, California span the 1867–1990 period with five bathymetric surveys during that period. The four periods of bathymetric change were modeled using a coupled hydrodynamic-sediment transport model operated at the tidal-timescale. The efficacy of idealization techniques was investigated by discontinuously simulating the four periods. The 1867–1887 period, used for calibration of wave energy and sediment parameters, was modeled with an average error of 37% while the remaining periods were modeled with error ranging from 23% to 121%. Variation in post-calibration performance is attributed to temporally variable sediment parameters and lack of bathymetric and configuration data for portions of Suisun Bay and the Delta. Modifying seaward sediment delivery and bed composition resulted in large performance increases for post-calibration periods suggesting that continuous simulation with constant parameters is unrealistic. Idealization techniques which accelerate morphological change should therefore be used with caution in estuaries where parameters may change on sub-decadal timescales. This study highlights the utility and shortcomings of estuarine geomorphic models for estimating past changes in forcing mechanisms such as sediment supply and bed composition. The results further stress the inherent difficulty of simulating estuarine changes over decadal timescales due to changes in configuration, benthic composition, and anthropogenic forcing such as dredging and channelization. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reconstructing sediment age profiles from historical bathymetry changes in San Pablo Bay, California
- Author
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Higgins, Shawn A., Jaffe, Bruce E., and Fuller, Christopher C.
- Subjects
- *
RIVERS , *SEDIMENTS , *PHYSICAL geography - Abstract
Abstract: Sediment age profiles reconstructed from a sequence of historical bathymetry changes are used to investigate the subsurface distribution of historical sediments in a subembayment of the San Francisco Estuary. Profiles are created in a grid-based GIS modeling program that stratifies historical deposition into temporal horizons. The model''s reconstructions are supported by comparisons to profiles of 137Cs and excess 210Pb at 12 core sites. The predicted depth of the 1951 sediment horizon is positively correlated to the depth of the first occurrence of 137Cs at sites that have been depositional between recent surveys. Reconstructions at sites that have been erosional since the 1951 survey are supported by a lack of detectable 137Cs and excess 210Pb below the upper 6–16cm of the core. A new data set of predicted near-surface sediment ages was created to illustrate an application of this approach. Results demonstrate other potential applications such as guiding the spatial positioning of future core sites for contaminant measurements. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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