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recorded by a Sutron SatLink2 data recorder. Water levels are then aggregated into daily mean values
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as shown in Figure 3.
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J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2017, 5, 31 5 of 26
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Salinity is estimated from specific conductivity measured at 30- or 60-min intervals by a YSI
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600R Water Quality Sonde and application of the International Equation of State of Seawater 1980
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and Practical Salinity Scale 1978 as recommended by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
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Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Joint Panel on Oceanographic Standards and Tables [19]. Daily
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mean salinities are shown in Figure 4, and summary statistics of the water level and salinity time series
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are presented in Table 2.
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Figure 3. Daily mean water level with respect to the National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929
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(NGVD29) at 5 stations in Florida Bay and the southern Everglades. Stations BK (a) and LM (b) are in
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Florida Bay; stations TR (c), E146 (d) and TSH (e) are within Taylor Slough.
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Figure 4. Daily mean salinity at 3 stations in Florida Bay. The horizontal line at 35 ppt represents
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nominal seawater salinity. (a) MK; (b) BK; (c) LM.
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J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2017, 5, 31 6 of 26
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Table 2. Station time series statistics.
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Station Location Water Level (m) NGVD Salinity (ppt)
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min mean max σ min mean max σ
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BK Buoy Key −0.12 0.29 1.03 0.109 9.94 35.91 66.07 5.70
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LM Little Madeira Bay −0.03 0.31 0.89 0.110 3.70 22.92 48.76 8.02
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TR Taylor River 0.08 0.37 0.89 0.125
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MK Murray Key −0.51 0.22 0.89 0.127 14.67 34.84 54.79 3.60
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E146 Taylor Slough −0.18 0.39 0.80 0.143
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TSH Taylor Slough Hilton −0.12 0.63 1.02 0.176
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2.4. Empirical Mode Decomposition
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Water level and salinity data are decomposed into Intrinsic Mode Functions (IMFs) and nonlinear
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trends through Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD) using the Hilbert–Huang transform [20,21]
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as implemented in the R package hht. Application of the EMD requires uniformly-sampled data
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without gaps. We reconstruct missing data in our time series by using random samples drawn from
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distributions of all available data for a specific year day. For example, if 1 January 2000 is missing,
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a Gaussian kernel is fit to all available data for 1 January. A random sample is then drawn from this
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distribution and used as the reconstructed value. This preserves the overall distribution of the data for
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a year day capturing seasonal trends, while realistically allowing for variance away from the mean on
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the daily timescale.
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2.5. Water Level Exceedance
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Water level exceedances are computed from daily mean water levels by summing the number
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of exceedance events above an elevation threshold for each year. The probability of exceedance at
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a specific threshold as a function of time follows a logistic function exhibiting exponential growth
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followed by a linear increase, terminating in nonlinear saturation as water levels continuously exceed
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the threshold [22]. The logistic function suggests a growth model for water level exceedances as they
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enter the initial growth phase:
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E(t) = E0 + α(t − TL) + (1 + r)
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t−TG
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τ (1)
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where E0 is the number of exceedances at year t = 0; α the linear rate of exceedance; r the growth rate;
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TL and TG the zero-crossing time of linear and exponential growth, respectively; and τ the growth
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time constant. This model is fit to yearly exceedance data with maximum likelihood estimation over a
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wide parameter space of initial conditions (Table 3), and the best-fit model from the parameter search
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is selected based on the minimum Akaike information criteria [23].
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Table 3. Initial values and phase space search increments for the exceedance model parameters of
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Equation (1).
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Parameter Values Increment
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E0 1 0
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α 1 0
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TL 1990–2010 5
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TG 1995–2010 5
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r 0–200 20
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τ 0–60 20
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To forecast the evolution of water level exceedance, we select an elevation threshold with
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landscape-specific relevance. For example, at the Little Madeira Bay (LM) station, inspection of
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coastal ridge elevations from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) mapping [24] finds a mean
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J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2017, 5, 31 7 of 26
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elevation of 70 cm NGVD29. Daily mean water levels are then extracted from the station data for the
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most recent three-year period, and yearly values of sea level rise from the low and high sea level rise
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projections are added to the dataset. Each set of yearly data is then processed to sum the total number
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of yearly threshold exceedances per year.
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2.6. Marsh to Ocean Transformation Index
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As sea levels rise, we expect a gradual transformation of freshwater coastal marshes into saltwater
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marshes and eventually into submarine basins. Florida Bay is largely open to the Gulf of Mexico
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to the west and relatively isolated from the Atlantic Ocean to the east by the island chain of the
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Florida Keys; as such, marine conditions can be found in western Florida Bay as shown by the
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tidally-dominated water levels at Buoy Key (BK) (Figure 3) and marine-like salinities at Murray Key
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(MK) and Buoy Key (Figure 4). As one moves eastward, the tidal signal diminishes (LM in Figure 3)
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with a transition to a terrestrial hydrologic cycle dominated by seasonal rainfall moving up Taylor
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Slough (Taylor River (TR), E146 and Taylor Slough Hilton (TSH)).
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To assess this change, we decompose the water level signals shown in Figure 3 using IMFs
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retaining only modes with intra-annual and longer oscillatory cycles, as shown in Figure 5. These low
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pass versions of water levels allow one to recognize lower amplitude ocean-dominated locations such
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as Buoy Key (BK) and the higher amplitude, more variable marsh-dominated water levels exemplified
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at TSH.
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Figure 5. Low frequency cumulative IMFs of water level data in Florida Bay and Taylor Slough shown
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in Figure 3. (a) BK; (b) LM; (c) TR; (d) E146; (e) TSH.
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We next identify IMFs representing ocean-dominated and freshwater marsh-dominated locales at
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BK and TSH, respectively, as shown in Figure 6, and use these IMFs as empirical basis functions
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to reconstruct the low pass water level signals at the intermediate stations LM, TR and E146.
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The reconstruction is based on linear combinations of weighted ocean and marsh basis functions with
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the goal of comparing the relative magnitudes of the ocean and marsh basis function fit coefficients as
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a metric describing the relative hydrologic influence of the marsh or ocean at a particular station.
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J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2017, 5, 31 8 of 26
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Figure 6. Low frequency IMFs at the BK and TSH stations to represent ocean-dominated and
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marsh-dominated hydrologic dynamics respectively. (a) Intra-annual modes; (b) annual modes;
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(c) comparison of low pass water level signals at BK and TSH constructed from the addition of the
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IMFs in (a) and (b).
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The model is thus:
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W(t) =
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i=H
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∑
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i=L
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ωi
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IMFΩi + µi
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