Fluxes and exchange of suspended sediment in tidal inlets draining a degraded mangrove forest in Kenya
Date
2003Author
Kitheka, JU
Ongwenyi, GS
Mavuti, KM
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study focuses on sediment exchange in the degraded Mwache mangrove forest wetland located in southern Kenya. It involved measurement of total and particulate organic suspended sediment concentrations (TSSC and POSC), tidal water elevation and current velocities. Results showed that in the heavily degraded backwater zone mangrove forest, the ebb and flood tide total sediment fluxes were of same order of magnitude, however, flood tide sediment fluxes were slightly higher than the ebb ones. In the moderately degraded frontwater zone mangrove forest, the flood tide sediment fluxes were more than 50% higher than the ebb tide fluxes. The peak net sedimentation in the highly degraded backwater zone was 4 g m−2 tide−1 but that in the moderately degraded frontwater zone was 63 g m−2 tide−1. In the frontwater zone of the mangrove forest, the peak instantaneous ebb tide sediment flux was 3206 kg tide−1 equivalent to 35.6 g m−2 tide−1 and the flood one 8574 kg tide−1 (95 g m−2 tide−1). The peak instantaneous flood and ebb tide particulate organic sediment (POS) fluxes in the frontwater zone mangrove forest were 1316 kg tide−1 (15 g m−2 tide−1) and 587 kg tide−1 (6.5 g m−2 tide−1), respectively. The peak ebb and flood tide sediment fluxes in the backwater mangrove forest were 3206 kg tide−1 (36 g m−2 tide−1) and 3305 kg tide−1 (36.7 g m−2 tide−1), respectively. In case of POS fluxes in the backwater zone mangrove forest, the peak flood period POS flux was 969 kg tide−1 (10.7 g m−2 tide−1) while the ebb period one was 484 kg tide−1 (5.4 g m−2 tide−1). In both highly degraded backwater and moderately degraded frontwater zone of the mangrove forest, there is net import of sediments. However, the net import is relatively lower in the backwater zone forest where the trapping efficiency is 27%. In the moderately degraded frontwater zone of the mangrove forest, the sediment trapping efficiency is 65%. The net sediment import occurs mainly in periods of high river discharge in both neap and spring tides, but occurs only in spring tides during dry season. The net accretion rates in the backwater and frontwater zone mangrove forests are 0.25 and 3.5 cm year−1, respectively
URI
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272771402002172http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/39503
Citation
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science Volume 56, Issues 3–4, March 2003, Pages 655–667Publisher
ScienceDirect Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute (KMFRI) Postgraduate Hydrology Programme, Department of Geography, University of Nairobi, Department of Zoology, University of Nairobi,
Subject
Mangrove wetlandInlet
Total suspended sediment concentration
Ebb–flood tidal discharge
Sediment fluxes
Sedimentation
Net sediment import and export
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