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1 Introduction 1.1 Integrated Cook Inlet Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (ICIEMAP) This report integrates and summarizes data from several studies that were coordinated through a unique set of partnerships, leading to combined field efforts to survey chemical, biological and physical parameters in Cook Inlet in 2008 and 2009. Much of the effort was directed to understanding the diversity of the Inlet, a complex and highly dynamic environment, but also assessed potential impacts by certain oil production operations in the upper Inlet. These efforts comprised a unique example of cooperation, coordination and leveraging of resources in forming an Integrated Cook Inlet Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (ICIEMAP). Sponsors of all four projects uniquely agreed to combine logistics and costs, allowing the sharing and reporting of the results presented in this report. Components of ICIEMAP include: Cook Inlet area-wide study based on the national Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) to measure water column parameters and benthic health in Cook Inlet and, separately, in oil-industry-operation areas. produced-water-discharge study designed to fulfill the requirements of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Cook Inlet Oil and Gas NPDES Permit (AKG-31-5000) that required certain operators discharging large volumes of produced water to assess the fate and transport of pollutants in the water column and sediments. portion of a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Status & Trends (NS&T) study to assess measures of water column and benthic health at a series of deep stations in Kachemak Bay to extend a much more detailed study that had been conducted in shallow areas of the bay in 2007. background river study to measure contaminant loads (metals and hydrocarbons) entering Cook Inlet from the larger freshwater rivers draining watersheds into the larger Cook Inlet. ICIEMAP began when Cook Inlet Regional Citizens Advisory Council’s (CIRCAC) developed a project to survey the benthic and water column environments in Cook Inlet using a stratified probabilistic survey design that would allow comparisons of oil industry areas with the rest of Cook Inlet. The plan was to sample using the EMAP protocols so that Cook Inlet data would be comparable with other Alaskan EMAP program results. 1 Shortly after CIRCAC received funding from NOAA’s Office of Restoration & Response for the EMAP study, EPA released a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit requiring certain oil industry operators to conduct a produced-water, fate-and-transport study of discharges from their treatment facilities. Since both studies had shared objectives and would be measuring similar parameters within the same region, CIRCAC worked with Chevron and XTO Energy through their contractors at Kinnetic Laboratories, Inc. to develop a plan that integrated and facilitated both studies by leveraging logistical, sampling, and analytical costs. The cooperative agreement included data sharing to provide a more comprehensive context in which to interpret the data; a windfall for both studies considering their limited funds. In the process of developing ICIEMAP, two smaller projects were incorporated into the plan. In 2007, the North Pacific Research Board and NOAA NS&T co-funded a study to assess habitat conditions that influence biodiversity and distribution of soft-bottom, benthic invertebrate communities in Kachemak Bay. The study design stratified by depth, as well as from east to west along the axis of Kachemak Bay. In 2007, all shallow stations were sampled. When the project lost second-phase (2008) funding, the ICIEMAP incorporated sampling at 5 of their deep stations in inner Kachemak Bay. Assisting their program benefited ICIEMAP since the probabilistic site selections for the Cook Inlet EMAP and the NPDES Permit sampling had not selected any sites for inner Kachemak Bay, although the Bay had been included in the sampling strata. The last project incorporated into the ICIEMP was a sampling program to measure contaminant concentrations in rivers entering the Cook Inlet marine environment from many of the major river systems. While the sampling for the other programs took place mainly in 2008, the river sampling was completed during two sampling trips in 2009. More details for each individual study are provided below and specific methods are outlined in Chapter 2. The data for all studies are incorporated together in the results chapters. Some statistical analyses do not incorporate the additional sites (oil facilities and rivers) as they were systematically selected and not intended for inclusion in the stratified, probabilistic survey design (described in further detail in Chapter 2). 1.2 Cook Inlet Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) One component of the integrated study, a Cook Inlet Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP), was designed to compare ecosystem health among Inlet marine waters, Cook Inlet oil-industry areas, and the largest mixing zones associated with the NPDES-permitted, large-volume dischargers. The study helps fulfill CIRCAC’s requirements in their founding legislation, the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA 90) which tasks them with “devising and 2 managing a comprehensive program of monitoring the environmental impacts of the operations of terminal facilities and of crude oil tankers while operating in Cook Inlet.” A brief history of CIRCAC contaminants-monitoring projects leading up to the current Cook Inlet EMAP program follows. In response to OPA 90, CIRCAC initiated steps to develop and manage a comprehensive environmental monitoring program for Cook Inlet, beginning in 1991. The goal of the program was to determine if oil-industry operations in Cook Inlet were having adverse effects on the surrounding ecosystem and, if so, to document their sources, magnitude, and spatial and temporal trends. Based on a 1992 model recommended by contractors (MBC 1992), a pilot study in 1993 provided data to evaluate needs for a longer-term environmental monitoring program. Additional environmental monitoring studies were conducted in 1994, 1995, 1996, and 1997 (ADL 1995a, 1995b; Kinnetic Laboratories Inc. 1996a, 1996b, 1997, 1998) that used modified, sediment-quality-triad (SQT) designs to assess sediment contaminants, sediment toxicity, and biological indicators of stress. In 1998, CIRCAC contracted with Littoral Ecological and Environmental Services (LEES) to compile a summary technical report and database that included an evaluation of the monitoring program to date and recommendations for future environmental monitoring. The resulting summary report stated that based on the overwhelming weight of evidence from the many aspects of the sampling program, hydrocarbon contamination was either lacking or, if observed, occurred at close to background levels or near the levels of detection for the particular method ((Lees et. al. 1999). The bulk of the samples and analyses were for subtidal sediments collected upstream, nearby, and downstream of oil-industry discharge. The limited number of intertidal samples collected downstream of the discharges also showed that hydrocarbons were not accumulating in bivalves living in or on the substrate. A qualitative ecological risk assessment was used to evaluate and focus the monitoring program. Based on that analysis, it appeared that dilution by the receiving water brought the concentrations of potential chemical stressors from daily discharges low enough that the exposure route to organisms is interrupted in areas outside of the mixing zones. However, the researchers recommended that a combination of periodic evaluation of benthic subtidal habitats and intertidal baseline data collections will continue to be necessary both to ensure that future potential impacts would be detected and to alleviate public perception and concern focused on industry discharges. In 2002 and 2004, CIRCAC partnered with the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to conduct a Coastal Assessment of the Gulf of Alaska’s coastal bays and estuaries by looking at a suite of contaminants in benthic sediments and organisms. The study design was based on EMAP’s probabilistic survey design (EPA, 2001) which allows “scalingup” from a suite of 50 sampling sites in the western Gulf of Alaska and 40 sites in Southeast Alaska. The value of these coastal Gulf of Alaska data to CIRCAC is that they can provide a context in which to interpret and compare the more focused studies required by OPA 90 by 3 providing background signals and providing information for areas “upstream” and “downstream” of Cook Inlet oil industry operations. The Cook Inlet EMAP study portion of the ICIEMAP used a similar probabilistic survey design. While the initial 2002 Alaska EMAP program sampled at several locations within Cook Inlet, the 2008 program was designed to sample only Cook Inlet and with a more comprehensive effort. As previously mentioned, the current objectives were to obtain background information about Cook Inlet’s benthic sediment environments while also evaluating the potential impacts to that environment by oil industry operations in upper Cook Inlet. While the national EMAP program was established and funded by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), partnerships have been necessary to carry out projects within each state. The Alaska component of EMAP is administered by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) under their Alaska EMAP (AKMAP). Through a Memorandum of Agreement with the DEC, Cook Inlet RCAC provided the scientific lead for the development of the coastal EMAP program in Alaska and provided a Chief Scientist for the field studies conducted in the Gulf of Alaska in 2002 and 2004, including sites in Cook Inlet (Saupe et. al. 2005). Basing ICIEMAP on EMAP protocols allows the data to be incorporated into the larger regional AKMAP efforts, thus providing regional perspectives at various spatial scales. Contaminants data provided by AKMAP includes metals, hydrocarbons, and persistent organic pollutants for sediments in the Gulf of Alaska’s coastal bays and estuaries, including Cook Inlet, as well as measures of water quality. Most prior coastal monitoring efforts in the Gulf of Alaska had been associated with specific areas or point sources such as NPDES-permitted discharges, assessing effects of oil spills, or monitoring associated with potential oil and gas activities. Those projectspecific sampling efforts have typically been spatially restricted and, thus, limited in their ability to interpret the localized results in the context of a broader regional perspective. 1.3 Produced Water Discharge Study On 2 July 2007, the EPA-issued permit number AKG-31-5000, Authorization to Discharge Under the NPDES for Oil and Gas Extraction Facilities in Federal and State Waters in Cook Inlet, became effective. This permit governs the discharge of 19 types of water, wastewater, and process-related fluids incidental to product extraction, treatment, and conveyance. The permit stipulates effluent limitations, recording and reporting requirements, monitoring requirements, and prohibitions, as well as other conditions. Relevant to this project, a new requirement specifies a study to address the fate and transport of pollutants from large-volume dischargers of produced water. This new permit requirement is described under section V titled “Produced Water Discharge Study Requirements” and includes the following specific language: 4 A. Produced Water Discharge Study. Operators discharging greater than 100,000 gallons per day of produced water shall plan and conduct a single study that addresses the fate and transport of pollutants in the water column and sediments. B. Objectives. The overall objective of the study is to evaluate contaminant fate and transport from large volume produced water dischargers. This can be accomplished by statistically comparing contaminant concentrations at the discharge point with concentrations at distances from the discharge point (transport) and evaluating the accumulation of contaminants in Cook Inlet’s water column and/or sediments (fate). C. Schedule. Within six months of the effective date of this permit, permittees shall submit a study plan to EPA Region 10 for approval. The final report shall be submitted to EPA within three years after the effective date of the permit. D. Requirements. The plan must address a monitoring approach that: 1. Can statistically evaluate the potential accumulation of discharge contaminants in Cook Inlet through a combination of total concentration analysis and fingerprinting; 2. Includes dissolved and total recoverable metal and hydrocarbon concentration analyses that can statistically compare discharge concentrations with receiving water concentrations with distance from the discharge point; 3. Evaluates and provides justification for including or excluding contaminants measured in the dissolved and/or total recoverable phase; in the water column and/or benthic sediments; and, 4. May include a phased study design, with detailed analyses of archived samples following initial screening-level analyses for some or all parameters. The permit fact sheet described the need for this study as follows: Because of the data limitations, EPA has historically relied on tools such as dispersion modeling to analyze the potential effects of discharges to make permitting decisions. To increase available ambient data and ensure that future permit decisions are based on more representative information, the Proposed Permit requires new fate and effects monitoring for large volume produced water discharges. 5 By cooperative agreement, the ICIEMAP replaced oil industry’s proposed study submitted to EPA on 31 December 2007. The ICIEMAP addressed the fate objective through comparisons of local sediment and water-column metals and hydrocarbons to the produced water source (before discharge) and by comparing the Mixing Zone area data to the larger industrial area data to the overall Cook Inlet data (described in Chapter 2). Sediment and water column samples were taken within the mixing zones and in the areas surrounding the mixing zones to assess pollutant concentrations as a function of distance from the discharge. A combination of dissolved, particulate, and total concentrations, in addition to fingerprinting, were utilized for this purpose. The transport study didn’t occur until 2009, after placement of a diffuser at the end of the Trading Bay Treatment Facility’s discharge pipe. The results from that component of the study are not yet finalized and will be described and presented as a separate report to EPA. 1.4 National Status and Trends (NS&T) Bioeffects Study for Kachemak Bay Deep Stations In 2007, prior to ICIEMAP, NOAA’s NS&T program conducted a baseline environmental characterization of inner Kachemak Bay using the sediment-quality-triad approach based on sediment chemistry, sediment toxicity, and benthic invertebrate, community structure. The study area was subdivided into 5 strata based on geophysical and hydrodynamic patterns in the Bay, using a stratified random statistical design approach. In addition, several sites near the village of Port Graham and in the footprint of a proposed Homer Harbor expansion were also collected for comparison. Concentrations of over 120 organic and metallic contaminants were analyzed, ambient toxicity was assessed using two amphipod bioassays, and detailed benthic-communitycondition assessments were performed. Additional habitat parameters (depth, salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, sediment grain size, and organic carbon content) that influence species and contaminant distribution were also measured. The 2007 data showed that sediments were mostly mixed silt and sand, characteristic of high energy habitats, with pockets of muddy habitat. Persistent organic pollutants were detected throughout the Bay but at relatively low concentrations. With few exceptions, metal concentrations were relatively low and probably reflect the input of glacial runoff. Homer Harbor sites were shown to have elevated metal and organic contaminants relative to the rest of Kachemak Bay, although it is a deeper, lower energy, depositional environment with finer grained sediments than elsewhere in the study area. Infaunal assessments showed a diverse assemblage with more than 240 taxa recorded and abundances commonly greater than 3,000 animals m-2. Benthic community assemblages were distributed based on depth and water clarity while significant toxicity was virtually absent. 6 But the 2007 study did not include samples from the deepest areas of Kachemak Bay. When funding did not come through to sample those deeper stations, ICIEMAP incorporated five deep Kachemak Bay stations into their sampling plan since most of the parameters measured in the NS&T study overlapped with those measured by the ICIEMAP. These sites supplement both the data collected during the 2007 NS&T study and the Cook Inlet area wide EMAP portion of the ICIEMAP collected during 2008. The five stations sampled were from areas deeper than 10 fathoms in inner Kachemak Bay, but excluded the fjords and embayments on the south side of the Bay. The results from these five stations are presented and interpreted in the various results chapters that follow. As well, a separate chapter (Chapter 6) describes the results in the context of the report on the 2007 data (Hartwell et. al. 2009). 1.5 River Contaminant Sampling Project The river contaminants project was designed to assess watershed contributions of hydrocarbons and metals to Cook Inlet via many of the major rivers discharging to Cook Inlet. The sampling builds on previous studies (Guay 2004, Frenzel 2000) that reported the rivers with varying concentrations of individual metals. Prior studies of hydrocarbons and metals in the Cook Inlet and Gulf of Alaska environments also report a range of concentrations, with some metals in benthic sediments naturally exceeding some defined measures of sediment quality. The results from ICIEMAP were designed for a more comprehensive understanding of natural metal and hydrocarbon inputs to Cook Inlet from watershed sources and to provide a context for interpreting contaminant concentrations measured in Cook Inlet’s marine water column and benthic environments. 1.6 Coordinating the Integrated Cook Inlet Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (ICIEMAP) A primary task of the ICIEMAP is to coordinate the efforts of four separate but related studies such that a comprehensive, relevant, and statistically-valid program is conducted that benefits each study beyond their own goals. For example, the combined study results will fulfill the requirements of the Cook Inlet NPDES Permit for large-volume dischargers to Cook Inlet while also providing CIRCAC with additional information fulfilling their OPA 90 monitoring mandates. One of the major strengths of the program is the team of Principal Investigators, many of whom have worked together on various marine research projects throughout Alaska. As well, each has significant experience working in Cook Inlet’s marine environment, has worked with Cook Inlet oil industry and agencies, and has experience conducting monitoring and assessment studies in the Cook Inlet area. Coordination of the overall ICIEMAP was conducted by CIRCAC and Kinnetic Laboratories, Inc. Numerous subcontractors (identified in Chapter 2) were integrated 7 into the program to lead various aspects of the studies. Funding for the field and sample analysis portions of the study was provided by the NOAA National Ocean Service’s Office of Restoration & Response and by Chevron and XTO (the large-volume dischargers required to conduct a fate and transport study for produced water). They also provided funding for data analysis and report writing, which was also supplemented by CIRCAC. Standard sampling, analytical and reporting protocols allow data sharing among the studies, thereby having reduced costs for each project, minimizing duplication, and maximizing the value of the data (e.g. each study’s results aids in the comparisons and interpretations of the other studies). 1.7 Cook Inlet Setting 1.7.1 Cook Inlet Geography and Climate Cook Inlet is a semi-enclosed 270 km long estuarine embayment that extends northward from the Gulf of Alaska (Figure 1). It is widest at the mouth (~90km) with a pinch point that narrows to less than 20 km and “separates” the upper Inlet from the lower Inlet. Cook Inlet includes several large features that include Kamishak Bay, Kachemak Bay, Redoubt Bay, Trading Bay, and Turnagain and Knik Arms, as well as many smaller bays and coves on both the east and west side (Figure 2). Approaching the Inlet, continental shelf bathymetry shoals up to less than 100 m at the mouth with a deeper channel branching into Kachemak Bay and extending along the axis of the Inlet and around Kalgin Island. Average depth is 60 m with the basin, ranging from 100 m near the mouth to 40 m or less at the head of the estuary. Several major islands occur throughout Cook Inlet and one of them, Augustine Island, is an active volcano and can be seen as a major feature in Kamishak Bay (Figure 2). Further north and flat in appearance, Kalgin Island lies in the middle of the central Inlet, while Chisik Island is a massive, uplifted rock formation tucked into the mouth of Tuxedni Bay on the western side. Near the Inlet's head, Fire Island can be seen amidst the mud flats just west of Anchorage. Semipermanent sand shoals occur in the central Inlet, south and west of Kalgin Island, and off Trading Bay in the upper Inlet. The shoals emerge on low tides, appearing as heavily rippled, almost pure-sand islands actively eroded and rebuilt in the strong currents. Ephemeral, the shoals are devoid of any resident biota. Quicksand is encountered around the unconsolidated margins. The scale and placement of mountain ranges in interior Alaska tends to trap and build significant weather features. During the summer, low pressure predominates over the inland area, and storms are relatively infrequent. During the winter, high pressure predominates over central Alaska, with frequent North Pacific storms (low pressure systems) traveling along the Gulf of 8 Alaska from the Aleutians (MMS, 1995 in ADNR 1999). Surface winds are strongest in the coastal area, averaging between 12 and 18 knots offshore. Winter extremes range from 26 to 39 m/sec, and can be even stronger when channeled by topography, such as in Turnagain Arm or the Matanuska Valley (AEIDC, 1974 in ADNR, 1999) or by coastal mountain gaps. Cook Inlet's climate is transitional between a maritime and a continental climate. The areas nearer to the Gulf of Alaska are more maritime influenced, while the head of the Inlet is more continental. Some areas of the Kenai Mountains receive over 2.5 m of precipitation per year due to the combination of elevated peaks and maritime moisture, while the flatlands of upper Cook Inlet receive less than a meter per year (KPB, 1990 in ADNR 1999). Without the moderating effects of the Gulf of Alaska, air mass temperatures of the upper Cook Inlet area are more extreme. Occasionally during the winter months, this area will experience short periods of extreme cold and/or high winds when strong pressure gradients force cold air southward from interior Alaska (KPB, 1990). In winter and summer, moderately strong. The Inlet region is also experiencing rapid climate change. Over the last 50 years, temperatures in Alaska have increased around 2 degrees Celsius on average, with most of the change occurring in the winter and spring (ACRC 2008). -pressure cells develop over the coastal plains of Kenai and Anchorage and the Susitna Valley. Summer water temperatures in Cook Inlet can reach over 10o C. Sea ice is generally present to some extent between November and April (LaBelle, et al., 1983 in ADNR, 1999). This ice, mostly a result of freshwater input from the northern rivers, is concentrated in the upper region of the Inlet, but occasionally drifts south as far as Anchor Point. Ice concentrations have also been observed in Kamishak Bay, as well as Chinitna, Tuxedni, and other western Cook Inlet bays (KPB, 1990 in ADNR, 1999). Sea ice also forms at the protected heads of small bays along Kachemak Bay where there is relatively little circulation and an abundance of fresh water. Though sometimes covering a large percentage of upper Cook Inlet, the sea ice readily fractures from the large tidal exchanges (Hopkins, 2004). A combination of sea ice and strong upper Inlet currents have proven to be operational hazards to moving or moored vessels. 1.7.2 Cook Inlet Watershed The Cook Inlet drainage area spans approximately 10,000 km2 of Southcentral Alaska. The largest river draining into Cook Inlet is the Susitna River, which is the 15th largest river in the US at an average flow of 1,450 cubic meters per second (USGS, 1990). Other large rivers draining into the inlet are the Beluga, McArthur, Big, Drift, Tuxedni and McNeil rivers on the west side, and the Matanuska, Knik, Portage, Kenai, Kasilof, and Fox Rivers on the east side. 9 The Cook Inlet drainage basin is surrounded by high mountains. These ranges include the Chugach, Talkeetna, Kenai, Alaska, Aleutian, and Tordillo mountain ranges. Glaciers cover about 10 percent of the land area of Cook Inlet basin, and provide a large portion of the input to these watersheds (Brabets and Whitman, 2004 in ADNR, 2008). Within the Aleutian Range are five active volcanoes: Mount Spurr, Mount Redoubt, Mount Iliamna, Mount Augustine, and Mount Douglas. The most recent eruption was from Mount Redoubt, in the spring of 2009, which endangered the Drift River oil storage facility with lahar flows and flooding. Both Mount Spurr and Augustine have also been active in recent decades. Cook Inlet receives large quantities of glacial sediment from the rivers in the watershed. Following general circulation patterns, sediment is generally transported up the east side of the Inlet and down the west side, and is moved out of Kamishak, Tuxedni, and Kachemak Bays (KPB, 1990 in ADNR 1999). Glacial rivers also contribute large amounts of fresh water to the inlet. Salinity decreases towards the head of the Inlet where the major freshwater inputs occur but there are pockets of depressed salinity near all rivers mouths. 1.7.3 Cook Inlet Bathymetry, Tides, and Currents North of the Forelands, Cook Inlet is generally less than 36 m deep, with deeper pockets and shallow shoals (Figure 3). South of the Forelands, two deeper channels extend on either side of Kalgin Island, and join together further south. This channel eventually widens to extend across the mouth of Cook Inlet, and reaches approximately 145 m deep (KPB, 1990 in ADNR 1999). The bottom sediments range from clay to cobbles, with sediment coarser than sand common outside protected waters (MSB 1983 in ADNR 1999). As with the rest of the Gulf of Alaska, Cook Inlet has semi-diurnal tides with the northern Inlet’s tidal range averaging close to 9 m, and can reach up to 11 m. The shape and bathymetry of the basin is such that the principal lunar semidiurnal tide (M2 tide factor) resonates and creates some of the highest tidal amplitudes in the world. The mean tidal range varies from 3.5 m at the Barren Islands (at the mouth of the Inlet) to more than 8 m at Anchorage (NOAA, 2006). In general, large tidal exchanges within a basin will create strong tidal currents. Local constrictions, however, such as that seen between the West and East Forelands (Figure 2), cause the tidal amplitude and subsequent currents to increase, creating areas of even greater current velocities, 3.3m/s (6.5 knots). While the Inlet as a whole has an average maximum surface current of 1.5 m/s (3 knots), local areas can have currents greater than 5 m/s (10 knots) (Li et. al. 2004). In Turnagain Arm at the head of the Inlet, under certain conditions, the rush of the incoming tide can create a tidal bore (moving wave) over a meter in height travelling up the Arm. 10 Figure 1. Cook Inlet and Gulf of Alaska from SeaWiFS satellite. Image provided by Orbimage. 11 Figure 2. Several major features within Cook Inlet. Image provided by Orbimage. 12 Figure 3. Cook Inlet bathymetry. Data from NOAA. Much of our understanding of the circulation of Cook Inlet comes from studies conducted in the late 1970’s (Burbank 1977, Barrick 1978, Muench et al. 1978, Muench et al. 1981). These studies cover a similar time frame and describe many of the same patterns (Figure. 4), net freshwater outflow from the upper Inlet and inundation of the Alaska Coastal Current into lower Cook Inlet creating a counter-clockwise pattern. More recent studies are refining these models, 13 showing that eddies shift or weaken significantly during differing seasons. Not surprizingly, the influence of currents entering from the Gulf of Alaska also vary significantly by season. A feature that is quite unique to the Inlet results from the interaction of the bathymetry and the large tidal flow. Known locally as tidal rips, strong shear and convergence zones form from changes in tidal flow associated with the changes in bathymetry. These convergent rips have demonstrated their abilities to accumulate debris, ice, and spilled oil, and may be a barrier to horizontal mixing. In a strong rip, oil slicks and debris have been observed to be sucked beneath the surface and pop up further downstream. Figure 4. Circulation patterns in lower Cook Inlet; left as presented by Burbank (1977) and right by Muench et. al. (1978). Three major river systems, the Knik, Matanuska, and Susitna Rivers, and numerous smaller, freshwater systems drain into the northern Inlet and combined, constitute the largest river drainage into the Gulf of Alaska. Many of the larger rivers drain glaciers and thus include ground up glacial flour. The freshwater influx and sediment loads from the rivers have high seasonal variability with peak flows associated with snowmelt in the spring and summer and weather (rain) events in the fall. Suspended sediments introduced by the rivers are transported by the prevailing currents and are either deposited in areas of lower flow or turbulence within Cook Inlet or are transported out of the Inlet and deposited downstream in Shelikof Strait 14 (Boehm, 1998). The lower Inlet is comprised of reworked glacial sediments (mainly sand and gravel). Large permanent sand waves, megaripples up to 10m high, have been described in the central lower Inlet, resulting from catastrophic glacial-meltwater flood events (MMS 2003). No significant accumulation of fine-grained-sediments occur in most of the central Inlet (Hein et al. 1977) due to strong tidal currents and potential deep-impacting winter storms. Fine sediments that do deposit in Cook Inlet have two primary sources - chlorite-rich Copper River silt and clay (transported from the eastern Gulf of Alaska via the Alaskan Coastal Current) and illite-rich silt and clay from several major rivers in upper Cook Inlet (Hein et al. 1979). The chlorite-rich clays are found on the east side of the Inlet whereas the illite-rich clays are characteristic of the west side. The two clays mix and are eventually deposited in Shelikof Strait south of Kamishak Bay (Atlas et al. 1983, Boehm 2002). 1.7.4 Ecology The circulation regime determines dominant habitats and ecosystems for different parts of the Inlet. The southern areas of the Inlet, including Kachemak Bay on the east side and parts of Kamishak Bay on the west side, are highly productive, due partly to both the upwelling of nutrient-rich waters through Kennedy and Stevenson entrances at the mouth of the Inlet, and to light penetration in these clear, oceanic waters. In contrast, with little light penetration in its turbid waters, the west-side is considered to be net-consumptive rather than net-productive. Along intertidal and subtidal shorezones, sedentary marine fauna occur closely associated with sediment type and water flow (turbulence). Kelps and macro-alga require a hard substrate upon which to attach. Providing shelter and productivity to their associated assemblages, a complex food web is created among its residents. On soft sediments, burrowing organisms are more likely encountered. The vast mud flats in the upper Inlet and particularly in Tuxedni Bay contain abundant invertebrate populations (small clams, worms and crustaceans) that are a critical food source for massive populations of migrant shorebirds. Coarser-grained sands and gravel habitats provide for larger, longer-lived, hard-shell clams along with various fish, crabs and starfish. Some species, namely razor clams, cockles, little-neck clams, tanner and dungeness crabs are of commercial and recreational interest. Under varying conditions of winter winds and currents, packs of ice will move about the Inlet. When they encounter the shoreline, ice scour can be a dominant disturbance in the intertidal and shallow subtidal. In cold years, exposed surfaces may be scraped completely clean of epibiota. These areas tend to rebound in the spring with ephemeral or opportunistic species such as barnacles and green alga, with these recruits lasting perhaps for a year or two before being 15 removed again in the next scouring event. During extreme cold conditions on upper Inlet mud flats, shifting ice gouges the ice-glazed sediments and in their wake, provides an exposed feeding niche for a small population of unique over-wintering rock sandpipers. With sufficient winter food, they are able to survive the harsh winter conditions and thus, gain a major advantage in the timing and reduced stress from their otherwise lengthy spring migrations. All five species of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp) spawn in the Cook Inlet watershed. The Inlet is also home to sea otters (Enhydra lutris), harbor seals (Phoca vitulina), harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), Dall’s porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli), the endangered Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus), and an endangered, indigenous population of beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas). Humpback whale populations (Megaptera novaeangliae) are increasing in southcentral Alaska and are now commonly seen in Kachemak Bay and along the outer Kenai coast. Transient killer whale pods (Orcinus orca) are occasionally seen in Kachemak Bay feeding on marine mammals. Many resident and migratory seabirds and shorebirds use Cook Inlet, with the wide intertidal mudflats of the upper Inlet and in areas of Kamishak and Kachemak Bay providing rich seasonal feeding habitat. 1.7.5 Human Activity in Cook Inlet The relatively mild climate, gentle topography, and easy ocean access of the Cook Inlet basin has made it the center of human activity in Alaska. Approximately 418,000 people live within the Cook Inlet watershed, almost two-thirds of the state's population (US Census Bureau, 2010). The majority of these people, around 280,000, live in the municipality of Anchorage while approximately 85,000 more live in the Matanuska and Susitna valleys northeast of Anchorage. Most of the remaining population, around 53,000, is found on the Kenai Peninsula on the eastern side of the Inlet. The west side of Cook Inlet is sparsely populated, home to only a few small towns and a smattering of oil and gas infrastructure. Due to its unique location with extreme tidal flushing, the city of Anchorage uses only primary wastewater treatment, pumping the remainder of its municipal waste directly into Cook Inlet. Most other major communities on the Inlet use secondary treatment but a few have tertiary treatment systems (Boraas, 2009). Anchorage is the largest port in Cook Inlet, and a major destination for cargo ships bringing goods into the state. Kenai/Nikiski on the Kenai Peninsula is the second busiest port, primarily serving the oil industry at the Tesoro refinery, and the ConocoPhillips-Marathon LNG plant. Smaller ports include Homer, on Kachemak Bay, and Drift River on the western side of the inlet. 16 Major industries in Cook Inlet include oil and gas extraction, fishing, and tourism. Offshore oil development took off in the 1960s, with production peaking in 1970 at 83 million bbls. Though production has since declined, the industry is still significant, with annual production of 6 million bbls of oil and 196 Bcf of gas in 2006. There are currently 14 active offshore platforms in central Cook Inlet, with many of these concentrated in the Trading Bay area (Figure 5). Pipelines beneath the Inlet carry product to tank farms, produced water treatment facilities (a focus of the ICIEMAP) and refineries on shore (Figure 6). Tanker vessels transport crude oil, refined oil, and liquefied natural gas year round, although unfavorable icing conditions occasionally limit winter operations. The salmon fishery is the Inlet's largest commercial fishery with all five species of Pacific salmon harvested. Drift gillnetting, set gillnetting, and purse seining, mainly in the upper Inlet, account for about 4% of Alaska's total harvest. Halibut, clams, and other finfish are also harvested commercially. Sport fishing and subsistence fishing are also important; approximately half of the state's total sport-fishing effort occurs in Cook Inlet. Personal use and subsistence salmon fisheries provide many Inlet residents with a valuable food source. Subsistence fisheries are culturally important in the less-populated areas of the Cook Inlet basin, including the communities of Nanwalek, Port Graham, Seldovia, Tyonek, Alexander, and Skwentna. Most of the Inlet is designated as "non-subsistence," but many residents participate in the "personal use" fisheries on the Kenai and Kasilof rivers. Tourism is also a significant part of the Cook Inlet economy, with most visitors arriving in the summer. In the summer of 2006, over 800,000 people visited Anchorage and over 400,000 visited the Kenai Peninsula. All of these human activities represent potential sources of contaminants in the Inlet’s water and sediments--through municipal wastewater inputs, runoff from urban areas, leaks and spills from vessel traffic, discharges from onshore- and offshore- oil and gas operations, mining wastes, fishprocessing discharges, as well as numerous smaller industries. 1.8 Report Organization A decision was made that not only would the sampling and analytical laboratory costs be shared, but an agreement was struck where the data would be received by all participants and one integrated report would be produced. Independent quality assurance/quality assessment of data tables would ensure that data were reported correctly. This report describes the combined efforts of all four studies described earlier in this chapter. Components of each study are integrated into each of the other studies. Chapter 2 provides field and laboratory analytical methods associated with all of the sampling efforts for the ICIEMAP. Individual results chapters provide methods for specific data analyses procedures that were unique to that chapter. The results are presented in chapters that are organized around the 17 physical environment (sediments and oceanography in Chapter 3); metals data for rivers, the water column, and benthic sediments (Chapter 4); organic contaminants for rivers, water column, and benthic sediments (Chapter 5); benthic invertebrates (Chapter 6); the NS&T deep stations in Kachemak Bay (Chapter 7); and overall conclusions from each chapter (Chapter 8). References (Chapter 9) and Appendices (electronic) complete the report. Some ICIEMAP data is used repeatedly in interpreting various results. For example, sediment grain size data are presented numerous times throughout the report as it was used to set the stage and interpret different datasets. Also, although Chapter 7 provides a mechanism for the NS&T program to describe the data for the five deep Kachemak Bay stations within the context of their earlier study in 2007, the invertebrate and contaminants data from those stations are also covered within each of the other result chapters. Finally, although there have been studies and synthesis of data in the late 1970’s under the auspices of Minerals Management Service’s (MMS) Outer Continental Shelf Environmental Assessment Program (OCSEAP) that described the general oceanography, geology and biology of the Inlet in anticipation of Federal oil leasing, modern surveys using more sensitive measuring or analytic technology (e.g., oceanography profiling instruments and chemistry lab methods) were not used much in Inlet studies before the mid 1990’s. Then, various programs of CIRCAC, MMS, and EMAP began delivering high-quality data relevant to current studies. 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