Multivariate analysis of the influences of oceanic and meteorological processes on suspended particulate matter distributions in Mississippi coastal waters

Stephan J O'Brien1, Patrick J Fitzpatrick2, Brian Dzwonkowski3, Steven Louis Dykstra3, Davin J Wallace4, Ian Church5 and Jeremy David Wiggert4, (1)The University of Southern Mississippi, Division of Marine Science, Stennis Space Center, MS, United States, (2)Mississippi State University, Geosystems Research Institute, Stennis Space Center, MS, United States, (3)University of South Alabama, Department of Marine Sciences, Mobile, AL, United States, (4)University of Southern Mississippi, Department of Marine Science, Stennis Space Center, MS, United States, (5)University of New Brunswick, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, Fredericton, NB, Canada
Abstract:
The Mississippi Sound is influenced by a high volume of sediment discharge from the Biloxi River, Mobile Bay via Pas aux Herons, Pascagoula River, Pearl River, Wolf River, and Lake Pontchartrain through the Rigolets. The river discharge, variable wind speed, wind direction and tides have a significant impact on the turbidity and transport of sediments in the Sound. Level 1 Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data is processed to extract the remote sensing reflectance at the wavelength of 645 nm and binned into an 8-day composite at a resolution of 500 m. The study uses a regional ocean color algorithm to compute suspended particulate matter (SPM) concentration based on these 8-day composite images. Multivariate analysis is applied between the SPM and time series of tides, wind, turbidity and river discharge measured at federal and academic institutions’ stations and moorings. The multivariate analysis also includes in situ measurements of suspended sediment concentration and advective exchanges through the Mississippi Sound’s tidal inlets between the coastal shelf and the nearshore estuarine waters. Mechanisms underlying the observed spatiotemporal distribution of SPM, including material exchange between the Sound and adjacent shelf waters, will be explored. The results of this study will contribute to current understanding of exchange mechanisms and pathways with the Mississippi Bight via the Mississippi Sound’s tidal inlets.