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Research Product

Summers, J. Kevin and Virginia D. Engle. 1993. Evaluation of Sampling Strategies to Characterize Dissolved Oxygen Conditions in Northern Gulf of Mexico Estuaries. EPA/600/J-93/071. Environ. Monit. Assess. 24(3):219-229. (ERL,GB 745). (Avail. from NTIS, Springfield, VA: PB93-169050)

Dissolved oxygen was continuously monitored in eight sites of northern Gulf of Mexico estuaries in August, 1990. Monte Carlo analyses on subsamples of the data were used to evaluate several commonly used monitoring strategies. Monitoring strategies which involved single point sampling of dissolved oxygen may often misclassify an estuary as having good water quality. In the case of shallow, often well-mixed estuaries that experience diurnal cycles, such monitoring often does not occur at night, during the time of lowest dissolved oxygen concentration. Our objective was to determine the minimum sampling effort required to correctly classify a site in terms of the observed frequency of hypoxia. Tests concluded that the most successful classification strategy used the minimum dissolved oxygen concentration from a continuously sampled 24-hour period.

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