FWRMC Salinity Network Workgroup

Workgroup Chair: Pending

Encroachment of saline water into Florida’s freshwater resources can potentially and adversely affect drinking water supplies, agriculture production, and industry as well as surface water environments. Over the past several decades, groundwater levels have declined throughout Florida. In addition, salinity concentrations have increased both locally and regionally. Two major causes of salinity increases are below normal rainfall from the late 1990s and pumping of groundwater from our aquifers. 

As a response, the Council approved formation of the Salinity Network Workgroup (SNW). The Salinity Monitoring Network covers the entire state. The goals of the SNW are:

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DEP sampler using a pressure gauge to measure water column height in a flowing artesian well

(1) to provide scientifically defensible data and information on the chemical, physical and biological characteristics of water that can be used by the state’s water policy-makers, the scientific community and the public, and

(2) to better understand the status and trends regarding the encroachment of saline water into Florida’s freshwater resources. The SNW coordinates the efforts of its member organizations, which include the department, the water management districts, the U.S. Geological Survey, and several county agencies. The SNW emphasizes groundwater but works closely with surface water monitoring programs.

The four current objectives of the SNW are:

(1) periodic production of May and September groundwater level percentile ranking maps,

(2) development of a Coastal Salinity Monitoring Network,

(3) development of a salinity groundwater quality index, and

(4) development of special sampling protocols for monitoring wells that are completed close to the freshwater/saltwater interface. 

Indices

Groundwater indices are tools used to summarize large quantities of data and group them by different characteristics so they can be examined further and better understood. The SNW has developed an index for groundwater levels throughout Florida. The workgroup is developing a new index on saline groundwater quality.

  • Groundwater Level Condition Index – The Groundwater Level Percentile Ranking Index (GWPRI) is based on percentile rankings of the groundwater levels for the period of record, which often spans two decades. Groundwater levels in each well are converted to percentile rank. Percentile ranks are calculated by ranking all water levels from lowest to highest and determining the percentage of observations below the observation of interest. The highest water level for a well is 1.00 (100%) and the lowest is 0.01 (1%).  
  • Saline Groundwater Quality Index – The development of the Saline Groundwater Quality Index (SGWQI) is only in its development stage. It probably will be based on one or more of the following indicators: chloride, total dissolved solids, specific conductance and possibly sulfate and sodium.

Publications

Additional Information

Additional information about the Salinity Network Workgroup’s development and past meetings can be found here.

Last Modified: Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 - 12:01pm