Seasonal-Scale Sedimentology and Restoration Potential in a Diversion-Fed Coastal Louisiana Wetland

Molly Keogh, Tulane University, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, New Orleans, LA, United States and Alexander Kolker, Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, Chauvin, LA, United States
Abstract:
Coastal Louisiana is threatened by high rates of subsidence and rapid land loss. One promising method to mitigate this land loss is to divert Mississippi River water into surrounding wetlands. This study examines the impacts of one such diversion. Completed in 2002, Davis Pond Freshwater Diversion is located approximately 35 river km upstream of New Orleans. Although initially designed and operated to reduce salinity levels in the interior marsh, the diversion also delivers sediment and nutrients to the subsiding wetland. As a result, new land has emerged adjacent to the Davis Pond outfall channel in recent years.

Here we examine patterns of seasonal-scale sediment accumulation and retention in the marsh surrounding Davis Pond diversion. Twenty-two short (5-cm) sediment cores were collected in spring 2015 immediately following a 13-day experimental release of Mississippi River water through the diversion. During this time, discharge increased from a base flow of approximately 28 m3s-1 (1,000 ft3s-1) to an elevated flow of between 142 and 283 m3s-1 (5,000 and 10,000 ft3s-1), before returning to base flow. A second set of cores were collected in fall 2015 after a 6-month period of base flow.

Sediment cores were analyzed for organic content, bulk density, and grain size. In addition, inventories of beryllium-7 were used to calculate seasonal-scale sediment accumulation and retention rates. This work leads to the development of a sediment budget for the Davis Pond area and determination of long-term sediment trapping rates. Davis Pond Freshwater Diversion is an understudied system that can provide a scalable model for coast-wide restoration projects critical to the protection of Gulf Coast communities.