Entrainment, dispersal, and settlement of scallop dredge sediment plumes: field measurements and numerical modelling
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Abstract
Entrainment, dispersal, and settlement of sediment plumes generated by scallop dredging were measured with an instrumented towed sled and downstream sensors during a series of experiments conducted in the main scallop grounds in Port Phillip Bay in southeastern Australia. When three 36-ha experimental plots were subjected to closely supervised, intensive dredging by commercial fishers, it was found that dredges suspend a thin layer of sediment (~0.5 cm thick) inducing initial near-bed concentrations of 2-15 kg·m -3 in a billowing turbid plume. At one field site where 30% of seabed sediment was less than 4 phi, concentrations reduced after 30 min to about 2% of the initial value and grain sizes decreased to a predominantly mud-sized sediment with a mean size of 5-6 phi. A numerical model was developed to depict plume transformations and settlement patterns. The model accurately predicted patterns of sedimentation and temporal changes to suspended sediment concentration and grain size distribution in the plume. By explicitly treating local seabed grain size, current, and water column turbulence, the model can be applied to other locations and conditions to examine suspended sediment concentrations and potential sediment-related impacts of scallop dredging.
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