The Cross Surfzone/Inner-shelf Dye Exchange (CSIDE) Experiment Overview: Binational Dye Tracer Releases to Study Pollution Transport and Dilution.

Falk Feddersen1, Sarah N Giddings2, Nirnimesh Kumar3, Derek Jeffrey Grimes4, Geno R Pawlak1, David Rivas5 and Margarita Diaz6, (1)University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States, (2)University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States, (3)Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Integrative Oceanography Division, La Jolla, CA, United States, (4)University of California, San Diego, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA, United States, (5)CICESE, Biological Oceanography, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico, (6)Proyecto Fronterizo de EducaciĆ³n Ambiental, Tijuana, Mexico
Abstract:
Per square km, the surfzone and inner-shelf are by far the most economically and ecologically important ocean regions, vital for recreation, food, and ecosystem services. Despite the importance of clean coastal waters to our economy and well-being, declining water quality threatens coastal ecosystem and human health worldwide. Healthy coasts are a significant priority to federal agencies, local government, and NGOs. In particular the San Diego US and Tijuana Mexico border region have unique and persistent water quality issues due to a range of pollution sources. Cross-shore exchange of tracers (e.g., pathogens, anthropogenic nutrients, harmful algal blooms - HABs, larvae) between the well-mixed surfzone and stratified inner-shelf is poorly understood. The surfzone, inner- and mid-shelf span drastically different dynamical regimes, with varying cross-shelf exchange mechanisms due to wave, wind, buoyancy, and tidal processes and intrinsic variability. The NSF funded CSIDE (Cross Surfzone/Inner-shelf Dye Exchange) experiment (Sept & Oct 2015) aims to increase our understanding of cross-shelf material exchange by performing 3 shoreline dye release experiments that are tracked for up to 20 km alongshore and over 48+ hrs. One dye release will be performed in Mexico and the dye transport tracked across the border. The dye will be tracked via a broad range of binational instrumentation. In this presentation, we present an overview of the CSIDE experiment, in particular the binational aspects of the study,