Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)

<p>As in many U.S. estuaries, the tidal San Joaquin River exhibits elevated organic matter production that interferes with beneficial uses of the river, including fish spawning and migration. High phytoplankton biomass in the tidal river is consequently a focus of management strategies. An unu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alan D. Jassby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2005-03-01
Series:San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9jb2t96d
id doaj-14dc37afc65b4eff93d7aa9a89da8c0b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-14dc37afc65b4eff93d7aa9a89da8c0b2020-11-24T23:25:19ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaSan Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science1546-23662005-03-0131ark:13030/qt9jb2t96dPhytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)Alan D. Jassby0University of California, Davis<p>As in many U.S. estuaries, the tidal San Joaquin River exhibits elevated organic matter production that interferes with beneficial uses of the river, including fish spawning and migration. High phytoplankton biomass in the tidal river is consequently a focus of management strategies. An unusually long and comprehensive monitoring dataset enabled identification of the determinants of phytoplankton biomass. Phytoplankton carrying capacity may be set by nitrogen or phosphorus during extreme drought years but, in most years, growth rate is light-limited. The size of the annual phytoplankton bloom depends primarily on river discharge during late spring and early summer, which determines the cumulative light exposure in transit downstream. The biomass-discharge relationship has shifted over the years, for reasons as yet unknown. Water diversions from the tidal San Joaquin River also affect residence time during passage downstream and may have resulted in more than a doubling of peak concentration in some years. Dam construction and accompanying changes in storage-and-release patterns from upstream reservoirs have caused a long-term decrease in the frequency of large blooms since the early 1980s, but projected climate change favors a future increase. Only large decreases in nonpoint nutrient sources will limit phytoplankton biomass reliably. Growth rate and concentration could increase if nonpoint source management decreases mineral suspensoid load but does not decrease nutrient load sufficiently. Small changes in water storage and release patterns due to dam operation have a major influence on peak phytoplankton biomass, and offer a near-term approach for management of nuisance algal blooms.</p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9jb2t96dbloomsclimatedamsestuarylightnutrientsphytoplanktonriversstreamflowturbidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan D. Jassby
spellingShingle Alan D. Jassby
Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
blooms
climate
dams
estuary
light
nutrients
phytoplankton
rivers
streamflow
turbidity
author_facet Alan D. Jassby
author_sort Alan D. Jassby
title Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
title_short Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
title_full Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
title_fullStr Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
title_full_unstemmed Phytoplankton Regulation in a Eutrophic Tidal River (San Joaquin River, California)
title_sort phytoplankton regulation in a eutrophic tidal river (san joaquin river, california)
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
issn 1546-2366
publishDate 2005-03-01
description <p>As in many U.S. estuaries, the tidal San Joaquin River exhibits elevated organic matter production that interferes with beneficial uses of the river, including fish spawning and migration. High phytoplankton biomass in the tidal river is consequently a focus of management strategies. An unusually long and comprehensive monitoring dataset enabled identification of the determinants of phytoplankton biomass. Phytoplankton carrying capacity may be set by nitrogen or phosphorus during extreme drought years but, in most years, growth rate is light-limited. The size of the annual phytoplankton bloom depends primarily on river discharge during late spring and early summer, which determines the cumulative light exposure in transit downstream. The biomass-discharge relationship has shifted over the years, for reasons as yet unknown. Water diversions from the tidal San Joaquin River also affect residence time during passage downstream and may have resulted in more than a doubling of peak concentration in some years. Dam construction and accompanying changes in storage-and-release patterns from upstream reservoirs have caused a long-term decrease in the frequency of large blooms since the early 1980s, but projected climate change favors a future increase. Only large decreases in nonpoint nutrient sources will limit phytoplankton biomass reliably. Growth rate and concentration could increase if nonpoint source management decreases mineral suspensoid load but does not decrease nutrient load sufficiently. Small changes in water storage and release patterns due to dam operation have a major influence on peak phytoplankton biomass, and offer a near-term approach for management of nuisance algal blooms.</p>
topic blooms
climate
dams
estuary
light
nutrients
phytoplankton
rivers
streamflow
turbidity
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9jb2t96d
work_keys_str_mv AT alandjassby phytoplanktonregulationinaeutrophictidalriversanjoaquinrivercalifornia
_version_ 1725558167247519744