TECHNICAL PAPERS
Jun 13, 2003

Comparison of Estuarine Water Quality Models for Total Maximum Daily Load Development in Neuse River Estuary

Publication: Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Volume 129, Issue 4

Abstract

The North Carolina Division of Water Quality developed a total maximum daily load (TMDL) to reduce nitrogen inputs into the Neuse River Estuary to address the problem of repeated violations of the ambient chlorophyll a criterion. Three distinct water quality models were applied to support the TMDL: a two-dimensional laterally averaged model, a three-dimensional model, and a probability (Bayesian network) model. In this paper, we compare the salient features of all three models and present the results of a verification exercise in which each calibrated model was used to predict estuarine chlorophyll a concentrations for the year 2000. We present six summary statistics to relate the model predictions to the observed chlorophyll values: (1) the correlation coefficient; (2) the average error; (3) the average absolute error; (4) the root mean squared error; (5) the reliability index; and (6) the modeling efficiency. Additionally, we examined each model’s ability to predict how frequently the 40 μg/L chlorophyll a criterion was exceeded. The results indicate that none of the models predicted chlorophyll concentrations particularly well. Predictive accuracy was no better in the more process-oriented, spatially detailed models than in the aggregate probabilistic model. Our relative inability to predict accurately, even in well-studied, data-rich systems underscores the need for adaptive management, in which management actions are recognized as whole-ecosystem experiments providing additional data and information to better understand and predict system behavior.

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References

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Information & Authors

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Go to Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Volume 129Issue 4July 2003
Pages: 307 - 314

History

Received: Jun 13, 2002
Accepted: Aug 2, 2002
Published online: Jun 13, 2003
Published in print: Jul 2003

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Authors

Affiliations

Craig A. Stow
Duke Univ., Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Environmental Science and Policy Division, Durham, NC 27708; Address as of August 2003, Dept. of Environmental Health Sciences, Arnold School of Public Health, Univ. of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208.
Chris Roessler
North Carolina Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources, Division of Water Quality, Raleigh, NC 27699.
Mark E. Borsuk
Duke Univ., Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Environmental Science and Policy Division, Durham, NC 27708; presently, Dept. of Systems Analysis, Integrated Assessment, and Modeling (SIAM), Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology (EAWAG), 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland.
James D. Bowen
Civil Engineering Dept., Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223.
Kenneth H. Reckhow
Duke Univ., Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Environmental Science and Policy Division, Durham, NC 27708.

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