Radioactive and stable isotopes reveal variations in nearshore submarine groundwater discharge composition and magnitude across low inflow northwestern Gulf of Mexico estuaries

Sci Total Environ. 2022 Jun 1:823:153814. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153814. Epub 2022 Feb 12.

Abstract

To determine how submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) magnitudes and composition (fresh or saline/recirculated) vary in nearshore low inflow estuaries across ⁓125 km of a semiarid coastline, this study assessed three south Texas estuaries, using radon [222Rn], radium [226Ra and 224Ra], and water isotopes [δ18O and δD]. Mass balance models of time-series 222Rn, found to be representative of total SGD in this study, revealed much higher SGD inputs to the Nueces Estuary (average [x̅] Nueces, Corpus Christi and Oso Bays: 120, 83, and 44 cm·d-1, respectively), attributed to anthropogenically-disturbed substrates and potentially surfacing growth-faults. The lowest 222Rn-derived SGD occurred in the Upper Laguna Madre Estuary (x̅: Upper Laguna Madre and Baffin Bay: 21 and 18 cm·d-1, respectively), explained by the drier climate, lower anthropogenic disturbance, and neighboring groundwater cone of depression. Aransas Bay in the Mission Aransas Estuary received greater average annual precipitation but exhibited low total SGD rates (x̅: 23 cm·d-1). Seasonally, average 222Rn-derived SGD rates increased following Hurricane Harvey (43 cm·d-1 in spring to 64 cm·d-1 in summer). In the Nueces Estuary, the overall 222Rn-derived SGDs were substantially higher than SGDs from 224Ra and 226Ra. The closer agreement between 224Ra and 222Rn-derived SGD and larger 224Ra rates in the Upper Laguna Madre Estuary, Aransas Bay and Oso Bay indicate that saline/recirculated SGD contributions were significant. Values of δ18O and δD confirm these types of inputs, with effects of evaporation/salinization more pronounced where recirculation was predominant and the opposite where terrestrial/222Rn-derived SGD inputs dominate. 226Ra-derived SGDs were lower than the 224Ra due to different behavior of the two isotopes while released into water following transport through saline and fine-grained estuarine sediments or due to wind-driven disturbances.

Keywords: Mission-Aransas Estuary; Nueces Estuary; Radon and radium; Stable isotopes; Submarine groundwater discharge; Texas coast; Upper Laguna Madre.

MeSH terms

  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Estuaries
  • Groundwater*
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Radium* / analysis
  • Seawater

Substances

  • Radium