Mowry Canal (C-103): Water Quality and Discharge into Biscayne Bay, Florida, 1975-1981

Material Information

Title:
Mowry Canal (C-103): Water Quality and Discharge into Biscayne Bay, Florida, 1975-1981 Report SFRC-83/06
Creator:
South Florida Natural Resources Center/South Florida Research Center, Everglades National Park
Daniel J. Scheidt
Mark D. Flora
Place of Publication:
Homestead
Florida
Publisher:
National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior
Publication Date:

Notes

Abstract:
The Mowry Canal (C-103) is located on the lower east coast of Florida approximately 25 miles south of Miami. Because of its location, it plays an important role in both flood protection and the salt water intrusion control network of southern Dade County (Fig. 1). The Mowry Canal is of special interest to Biscayne National Park because its annual discharge is generally the greatest of the three major water management canals that discharge into southern Biscayne Bay (Fig. 2). Mean annual discharges for water-years 1975-1980 (Oct 1 - Sep 30) were recorded as 162,234 acre-feet for the Mowry Canal, 137,731 acre-feet for the Snapper Creek Canal (C-2), and 106,584 acre-feet for the Black Creek Canal (c-1) (WY 1978 is omitted since discharge data for that year are not available for the Black Creek Canal). Typically, the combined discharge from these three canals was greater than 400,000 acre-feet per year during the period of this study. ( English )

Record Information

Source Institution:
Florida International University
Holding Location:
South Florida Natural Resource Center
Rights Management:
Please contact the owning institution for licensing and permissions. It is the user's responsibility to ensure use does not violate any third party rights.
Resource Identifier:
I 29.95: SFRC- 83/06 ( sudoc )