Abstract

Hilo Bay, Hawai'i, is an estuary of great importance to its neighboring coastal community, but it is threatened by impaired water quality indicated by excessive turbidity and chlorophyll a associated with river discharges of sediments and nutrients. The Wailuku River in the western half of the bay is the primary source of freshwater discharge, hypothesized here to form a surface water-dominant half of the bay with different water quality traits than the groundwater-dominant, eastern half of the bay where the spring-fed Wailoa River discharges. The water quality of both halves of the bay over different flow conditions of the Wailuku River is examined in this study using spatially distributed water quality sampling which collects hundreds of samples in either half of the bay at a distance of about every 40m. The dense sample shows significant differences between the two halves of the bay, with greater salinity dilution and turbidity in the surface water-dominant area. Both salinity and turbidity have a predictable relation to discharge, with salinity decreasing and turbidity increasing in higher flow conditions. Chlorophyll a, however, has a more complex relation to discharge, as chlorophyll a concentrations are greatest in high-flow conditions, but this may be because the water quality samples were collected in different seasons. Furthermore, significantly greater chlorophyll a concentrations in the groundwater-dominant half of the bay in low-flow conditions show that discharge may be spuriously correlated to chlorophyll a, and further studies of the effects of surface water discharge on chlorophyll a concentrations are warranted.

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