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Strategic Line III: Condition of coastal systems and their environmental trend

Projects in process

The coastal zone is the point of entry of different elements that are generated in the land area of influence (waste of human activities, dragging of sediments by rain wash).

In arid or semi-arid areas, tropical rain is important because with its dragging to the coastal area, it takes organic material and sediments, which are capable of modifying, temporarily or permanently, the shape of the coastline (sediments) and the quality of the water that receives these contributions (nitrogen, phosphorus), which at the same time can promote changes in the populations of marine organisms (red tides).

Another process that is not evident but important is underground flow. Fresh water that supplies the populations of arid areas comes from the water stored in aquifers which is exploited by wells. A fraction of this underground water is partially or constantly dumped into the sea, introducing higher concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus. This process is practically unknown to arid areas, thus its study could value the importance of changes in coastal marine water quality.

Tormenta en La Paz, México

Tropical storm over La Paz, BCS:
How does coastal water quality change
after general drainage caused by rainfall?
Project archive photograph.

In this line of research, we study these four processes:

  1. Growth or erosion pattern of the coastal area due to changes in the natural contribution of sand and by construction of coastal urban infrastructure;

  2. Effects on environmental quality of the coastal area by nitrogen and phosphorus contributions that come from basin drainage and by the influence of human activities (agriculture, aquaculture, urban growth;
  3. Changes in communities of mangrove, and bioindicators of environmental trend, and
  4. Effects of nitrogen and phosphorus contributions in the presence and probable increase of red tides and their consequences in other economically important marine organisms (toxins in mollusks, death of sea fish), as well as their consequences in human health (intoxication by toxin content consumption in mollusks and fish).
Written by Dr. Carlos Lechuga Devéze   
Last Updated on Tuesday, 01 June 2010 09:27
 
Instituto Politécnico Nacional 195, Playa Palo de Santa Rita Sur; La Paz, B.C.S. México; C.P. 23096, Tel:(52) (612) 123-8484 Fax:(52) (612) 125-3625
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Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, S.C.