Supported by the National Science Foundation.

WATERS Test Bed Site — Santa Fe Basin

WATERS Test Bed Site Santa Fe Basin

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The CUAHSI WATERS Test Bed project—Design and Demonstration of a Distributed Sensor Array for Predicting Water Flow and Nitrate Flux in the Santa Fe Basin. The study site is the Santa Fe River watershed in north-central Florida.  The Santa Fe River is a major tributary to the Suwannee River and the watershed has similar characteristics to the Suwannee River Basin, but at a smaller scale, making it an ideal test-bed for developing new sampling and analytical capabilities required for observatory science.  Both rivers cross the Cody escarpment (scarp), which marks the boundary between geologically confined and unconfined portions of the Floridan Aquifer, and the change from a surface water to ground water dominated system.  The entire region is undergoing a transition from minimal anthropogenic impact to multiple stressors from land-use practices making predictive basin-scale science essential.  Science questions to be addressed include improving understanding of water and nitrate fluxes, determining the spatial and temporal variability of basin-scale regulators of nitrate load, assessing the influence of landscape factors on nitrate load and delivery dynamics, and determining predictive relationships between nitrate flux and various surrogates.

This project develops new engineering approaches to address science questions about loading of nitrate to watersheds: how geologic setting, land use and terrain influence loading; the relationship between flow mixtures and nitrate loads; and the feasibility of using surrogate measures for estimating basin scale nitrate dynamics in space and time.  The engineering approaches are two-pronged.  (1) Commercially available nitrate, conductivity, temperature, and pressure sensors will be installed in an array that will sample at sub-daily frequencies and communicate via cell phone technology in real time to a central computer.  (2) Existing mission agency data will be used to develop a statistical algorithm based on information theory to identify minimum spatial and temporal spacing of sampling necessary to reduce uncertainty to a prescribed level. This algorithm will be validated with the newly collected data.


Contact Information

Site Contacts Address
Principal Investigator:
Wendy D Graham
Email: wgraham@ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-5893 x2113

Co-Principal Investigators:
Matthew J Cohen
Email: mjc@ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-3516
Joseph J Delfino
Email: jdelf@eng.ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-9377
Jonathan B Martin
Email: jbmartin@ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-9219
Kenneth C Slatton
Email: slatton@ece.ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-0634

Research Coordinators:
Kathleen A. McKee
Email: katmckee@ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-5893 x2114
Mark A. Newman
Email: markn@ufl.edu
Phone: (352) 392-5893 x2115
University of Florida
Water Institute
570 Weil Hall
PO Box 116601
Gainesville, FL 32611-6601
FAX: (352) 392-6855

Research Topics

Design and Demonstration of a Distributed Sensor Array for Predicting Water Flow and Nitrate Flux in the Santa Fe Basin. [more information (PDF)]

Institutional Affiliations Research Web pages