Fortnightly Switching of Residual Flow Drivers Produced by Seawater Intrusion in a Long, Non-rotating Estuary
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer
Materia
ADCP Baroclinic Barotropic
Fecha
2025-09-20Referencia bibliográfica
Garel, E., Khosravi, M., Díez-Minguito, M. et al. Fortnightly Switching of Residual Flow Drivers Produced by Seawater Intrusion in a Long, Non-rotating Estuary. Estuaries and Coasts 48, 176 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-025-01605-1
Patrocinador
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) - SWITCH project (PTDC/CTAOHR/4268/2021; LA/P/0069/2020; UID/00350/2020)Resumen
Towed and moored ADCP and salinity measurements were collected in Summer 2023 at two cross-channel transects of the
80-km-long Guadiana Estuary, at 4 km and 20 km from the mouth, during low (<10 m3
/s) river discharge conditions. The
dataset indicates that the lateral structure of axial residual fows changed from vertically sheared to laterally sheared with tidal
forcing. These structures resemble theoretical expectations for a density-driven or eddy viscosity-shear covariance (ESCO)
circulation at neap tide and for a tidally driven circulation produced by longitudinal advection (tidal stress) at spring tide.
The tidal variability of the residual fow magnitude and of the contributions of unidirectional or two-layer vertical profles
indicate that the primary driver of the residual circulation changes between neap tide and spring tide. Seawater (i.e. with
salinity>35 kg/g) intrusion was several kilometres, equivalent to ~ 1/8 of the estuary’s length. As a result, the horizontal
density gradient was weakest near the mouth where the residual circulation was barotropic, produced by tidal stress at spring
tide and possibly by an ESCO mechanism at neap tide. At 20 km upstream, the dominant driver switched from tidal stress
at spring tide to a baroclinic (and potentially ESCO) circulation at neap tide. At this location, scaling analyses of the tidally
averaged momentum equation using the densimetric tidal Froude number supported the idea of dominance of tidal stress
at spring tide.





