Sediment grain size measurements are affected by site-specific sediment characteristics and analysis methods: implications for environmental monitoring |
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Authors: | Stephen Hunt Hannah F. E. Jones |
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Affiliation: | Waikato Regional Council, Hamilton, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Sediment grain size, and specifically changes in the percent mud content (i.e. the fraction <63?µm) over time is often used as an indicator of estuarine environmental health. Using sediment samples from three distinct estuarine systems, we determined that different analytical methods (laser diffraction and wet sieving) gave significantly different results in terms of percent mud content. These differences are also ecologically meaningful when considering the influence of mud on estuarine macrofauna. We propose an approach to measuring sediment grain size termed Environmentally Available Sediment (EAS), which advocates for the measurement of the sediment that biota are directly exposed to. For the purposes of environmental monitoring, it is also essential to monitor sediment grain size in a repeatable way which is likely to be achieved using consistent (or no) pre-treatment and the use of a measurement technique that is unlikely to change over time, e.g. wet sieving. |
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Keywords: | Particle size analysis estuary environmental indicator environmentally available sediment state of the environment |
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