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In search of the source of beach pollution, scientists monitor groundwater

 New Sea Grant Study to Look at Beaches in Santa Cruz and Bolinas

By Christina S. Johnson, NOAA California Sea Grant

The wet sand shows submarine groundwater seeping out during a very low tide.

The wet sand shows submarine groundwater seeping out during a very low tide. Photo: Alexandria Boehm, Stanford University

With NOAA support, two Stanford researchers will soon test a theory that may explain chronic beach pollution in California and elsewhere.

The theory: groundwater discharging to the coast is indirectly or directly increasing the abundance of harmful bacteria - the kind that close beaches to swimming - and may be as important to understanding coastal pollution as the more often implicated urban runoff.

The research, to begin in March, is a follow-up on field experiments conducted in 2003 at Huntington Beach , Calif.- an area well known for a mysterious rash of summer-time beach closures. In this work, Alexandria Boehm, a professor of environmental engineering, and Adina Paytan, a professor of geological and environmental sciences, showed that the amount of submarine groundwater flowing into the surf zone varies with the phase of the moon and that microbial pollution levels are higher when a lot of submarine ground water is making it to the beach.

"People have largely ignored submarine groundwater because it is hard to see, because Groundwater percolates beneath the surface. But this does not mean it is not important."

--Adina Paytan, a marine biogeochemist at Stanford University

Groundwater is water from rain, snowmelt, irrigation, etc. that seeps underground, filling pore spaces of rocks and sediments. Unless trapped, groundwater eventually flows to sea. Along the way, it may become contaminated with bacteria and nutrients from leaky sewers, septic tanks, lawn fertilizers, pet waste and the like. “Submarine groundwater” refers to the underground mix of groundwater and saltwater that ebbs and flows into coastal waters with the pull of the tides.

Five trashcans filled with beach water for testing line the shore.

Researchers collected about 11 metric tons of beach water with trashcans, allowing them to test for the relatively low concentrations of radium, a widely accepted tracer of groundwater. Photo: Alexandria Boehm, Stanford University

Although researchers have been able to show that bacterial counts vary with lunar cycles at 50 Southern California beaches, they have yet to observe what would be expected to be true - that groundwater itself is a source of bacteria. In fact, only 1 of 26 groundwater samples tested at Huntington Beach had elevated levels of fecal indicator bacteria, the standard by which authorities evaluate beach water quality.

The central question now is to explain how bacterial counts could be so closely linked to submarine groundwater discharges if the groundwater itself is not contaminated.

The new NOAA California Sea Grant project will allow the scientists to investigate possible explanations.

A leading hypothesis, Boehm says, is that beach sand may store fecal indicator bacteria. Groundwater may "free" bacteria that would otherwise remain held in sediments.

Another possibility: groundwater contains dissolved organic matter and nutrients - phosphate, nitrate and ammonia- that encourage the growth of bacteria.

Professor and students pose on the beach with some of their testing equipment, including a well-point tube for extracting groundwater.

Stanford professor Alexandria Boehm in the light blue jacket (far right) and graduate students who helped gather field data. The long white pole is a "well point" -- a long hollow tube through which groundwater is extracted. Photo: Alexandria Boehm, Stanford University

In their 2003 study, scientists found that nitrate concentrations were 100 times higher in submarine groundwater than in the surf zone. Nitrogen and phosphate might influence the growth of plankton and could influence the occurrence of toxic algal blooms in some areas, Boehm said.

Another issue to be explored is the extent to which land-use patterns influence submarine groundwater and beach water quality. During their Sea Grant project, Boehm and Paytan will collect water samples from beaches in Santa Cruz, which sits within NOAA's Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and Bolinas, which is north of San Francisco and within NOAA's Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary.

These sites have different population densities and wastewater management plans. Residents of rural Bolinas are on septic tanks, which means waste is released into the ground. Santa Cruz , in contrast, is relatively urban, and the city's treated sewage is discharged at sea.

"We are the only researchers studying the connection between submarine groundwater discharges and California coastal water quality," Boehm said. "The Sea Grant research will allow us to document how the quantity and quality of submarine groundwater affects beach water quality. ...There are many regulations for what is discharged from the land to the sea via runoff. Results from our work may suggest that what is discharged from the land to the sea via the subsurface should be regulated, too."

 

The largest of the 30 Sea Grant programs, California Sea Grant draws on the talents of scientists and engineers at public and private universities throughout the state. It is administered by the University of California and is based at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego. Through the research it sponsors, the Program contributes to the growing body of knowledge about coastal and marine resources and helps solve contemporary marine-related problems. Through its Extension and Communications components, California Sea Grant transfers information and technology developed in its research efforts to industry, government and the public.

2/6/2006


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