Wave energy level and geographic setting correlate with Florida beach water quality

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2015-09
Authors
Feng, Zhixuan
Reniers, Ad
Haus, Brian K.
Solo-Gabriele, Helena M.
Kelly, Elizabeth A.
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Water quality
Enterococci
Fecal coliform
Exceedance
Wave energy level
Recreational beaches
Abstract
Many recreational beaches suffer from elevated levels of microorganisms, resulting in beach advisories and closures due to lack of compliance with Environmental Protection Agency guidelines. We conducted the first statewide beach water quality assessment by analyzing decadal records of fecal indicator bacteria (enterococci and fecal coliform) levels at 262 Florida beaches. The objectives were to depict synoptic patterns of beach water quality exceedance along the entire Florida shoreline and to evaluate their relationships with wave condition and geographic location. Percent exceedances based on enterococci and fecal coliform were negatively correlated with both long-term mean wave energy and beach slope. Also, Gulf of Mexico beaches exceeded the thresholds significantly more than Atlantic Ocean ones, perhaps partially due to the lower wave energy. A possible linkage between wave energy level and water quality is beach sand, a pervasive nonpoint source that tends to harbor more bacteria in the low-wave-energy environment.
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Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Pollution Bulletin 104 (2016): 54-60, doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2016.02.011.
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