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    Evaluating the Emergent Controls of Stream Water Quality with Similitude and Dimensionless Numbers

    Source: Journal of Hydrologic Engineering:;2019:;Volume ( 024 ):;issue: 005
    Author:
    Omar I. Abdul-Aziz
    ,
    Shakil Ahmed
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0001769
    Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
    Abstract: The emergent hydrologic and land-use controls of coastal-urban stream water quality were evaluated by using similitude and dimensional analysis, considering southeast Florida a prototype of growing coastal-urban environments. The goal was to test a fundamental hypothesis that the coastal-urban stream water quality processes represent emergent ecohydrological-biogeochemical similitudes (parametric reductions). The in-stream total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), and biomass (Chl a) were normalized by their immediate upstream reach concentrations to formulate the dimensionless numbers of TN/TN0, TP/TP0, and Chl a/Chl a0. Stream dissolved oxygen (DO) was normalized by its saturated concentration (DOsat) to obtain the dimensionless DO/DOsat number—avoiding a misleading scaling by upstream concentrations in the presence of a DO sag phenomenon. The emergent controls of stream water quality were represented by a small set of dominant driver dimensionless numbers. For each water quality indicator, nine original variables (including predictors and response) were reduced to three to four important and mechanistically meaningful dimensionless numbers. The hydrologic control number (role of watershed hydrology versus the external Everglades) and salinity number (ratio of downstream to upstream salinity) exhibited the key controls on stream TN/TN0 across the wet and dry seasons. In contrast, the land-use number (ratio of agricultural plus vegetated lands to built lands), hydrologic control number, and salinity number dominated TP/TP0 and Chl a/Chl a0 incorporating the two seasons. However, DO/DOsat was controlled by the hyporheic exchange number (role of watershed groundwater versus surface hydrology) and land-use number in the wet and dry seasons, respectively. The formulated similitude and dimensionless numbers provided important insights and understanding that may help achieve healthy coastal-urban streams.
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      Evaluating the Emergent Controls of Stream Water Quality with Similitude and Dimensionless Numbers

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    contributor authorOmar I. Abdul-Aziz
    contributor authorShakil Ahmed
    date accessioned2019-09-18T10:36:43Z
    date available2019-09-18T10:36:43Z
    date issued2019
    identifier other%28ASCE%29HE.1943-5584.0001769.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4259376
    description abstractThe emergent hydrologic and land-use controls of coastal-urban stream water quality were evaluated by using similitude and dimensional analysis, considering southeast Florida a prototype of growing coastal-urban environments. The goal was to test a fundamental hypothesis that the coastal-urban stream water quality processes represent emergent ecohydrological-biogeochemical similitudes (parametric reductions). The in-stream total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), and biomass (Chl a) were normalized by their immediate upstream reach concentrations to formulate the dimensionless numbers of TN/TN0, TP/TP0, and Chl a/Chl a0. Stream dissolved oxygen (DO) was normalized by its saturated concentration (DOsat) to obtain the dimensionless DO/DOsat number—avoiding a misleading scaling by upstream concentrations in the presence of a DO sag phenomenon. The emergent controls of stream water quality were represented by a small set of dominant driver dimensionless numbers. For each water quality indicator, nine original variables (including predictors and response) were reduced to three to four important and mechanistically meaningful dimensionless numbers. The hydrologic control number (role of watershed hydrology versus the external Everglades) and salinity number (ratio of downstream to upstream salinity) exhibited the key controls on stream TN/TN0 across the wet and dry seasons. In contrast, the land-use number (ratio of agricultural plus vegetated lands to built lands), hydrologic control number, and salinity number dominated TP/TP0 and Chl a/Chl a0 incorporating the two seasons. However, DO/DOsat was controlled by the hyporheic exchange number (role of watershed groundwater versus surface hydrology) and land-use number in the wet and dry seasons, respectively. The formulated similitude and dimensionless numbers provided important insights and understanding that may help achieve healthy coastal-urban streams.
    publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
    titleEvaluating the Emergent Controls of Stream Water Quality with Similitude and Dimensionless Numbers
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume24
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Hydrologic Engineering
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0001769
    page04019010
    treeJournal of Hydrologic Engineering:;2019:;Volume ( 024 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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