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Fresh groundwater discharge insignificant for the world’s oceans but important for coastal ecosystems
by
Gleeson, Tom
, Moosdorf, Nils
, Luijendijk, Elco
in
704/242
/ 704/47/4112
/ 704/829/827
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coral reefs
/ Discharge
/ Estuaries
/ Eutrophication
/ Geology
/ Groundwater
/ Groundwater discharge
/ Groundwater flow
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hydrogeology
/ Marine ecosystems
/ Marine systems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nutrients
/ Oceans
/ open climate campaign
/ Rivers
/ Salt marshes
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Silica
/ Silicon dioxide
/ Solutes
/ Strontium
2020
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Fresh groundwater discharge insignificant for the world’s oceans but important for coastal ecosystems
by
Gleeson, Tom
, Moosdorf, Nils
, Luijendijk, Elco
in
704/242
/ 704/47/4112
/ 704/829/827
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coral reefs
/ Discharge
/ Estuaries
/ Eutrophication
/ Geology
/ Groundwater
/ Groundwater discharge
/ Groundwater flow
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hydrogeology
/ Marine ecosystems
/ Marine systems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nutrients
/ Oceans
/ open climate campaign
/ Rivers
/ Salt marshes
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Silica
/ Silicon dioxide
/ Solutes
/ Strontium
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Fresh groundwater discharge insignificant for the world’s oceans but important for coastal ecosystems
by
Gleeson, Tom
, Moosdorf, Nils
, Luijendijk, Elco
in
704/242
/ 704/47/4112
/ 704/829/827
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coral reefs
/ Discharge
/ Estuaries
/ Eutrophication
/ Geology
/ Groundwater
/ Groundwater discharge
/ Groundwater flow
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hydrogeology
/ Marine ecosystems
/ Marine systems
/ multidisciplinary
/ Nutrients
/ Oceans
/ open climate campaign
/ Rivers
/ Salt marshes
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Silica
/ Silicon dioxide
/ Solutes
/ Strontium
2020
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Fresh groundwater discharge insignificant for the world’s oceans but important for coastal ecosystems
Journal Article
Fresh groundwater discharge insignificant for the world’s oceans but important for coastal ecosystems
2020
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Overview
The flow of fresh groundwater may provide substantial inputs of nutrients and solutes to the oceans. However, the extent to which hydrogeological parameters control groundwater flow to the world’s oceans has not been quantified systematically. Here we present a spatially resolved global model of coastal groundwater discharge to show that the contribution of fresh groundwater accounts for ~0.6% (0.004%–1.3%) of the total freshwater input and ~2% (0.003%–7.7%) of the solute input for carbon, nitrogen, silica and strontium. However, the coastal discharge of fresh groundwater and nutrients displays a high spatial variability and for an estimated 26% (0.4%–39%) of the world’s estuaries, 17% (0.3%–31%) of the salt marshes and 14% (0.1–26%) of the coral reefs, the flux of terrestrial groundwater exceeds 25% of the river flux and poses a risk for pollution and eutrophication.
The authors here present the global entry of nutrients into marine systems through fresh submarine groundwater discharge to be below 1%. However, they also identify hotspots and argue that about 25% of world’s estuaries are at danger of eutrophication.
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